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Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2009;46(5): 437-442.
doi: https://doi.org/10.3340/jkns.2009.46.5.437
The Change of Adjacent Segment and Sagittal Balance after Thoracolumbar Spine Surgery.
Kang San Kim, Hyung Sik Hwang, Je Hoon Jeong, Seung Myung Moon, Sun Kil Choi, Sung Min Kim
1Department of Neurosurgery, College of Medicine, Hallym University, Seoul, Korea. hyungsik99@yahoo.co.kr
2Department of Neurosurgery, East-West Neo Medical Center, Kyung-Hee University, Seoul, Korea.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE
To characterize perioperative biomechanical changes after thoracic spine surgery.
METHODS
Fifty-eight patients underwent spinal instrumented fusions and simple laminectomies on the thoracolumbar spine from April 2003 to October 2008. Patients were allocated to three groups; namely, the laminectomy without fusion group (group I, n = 17), the thoracolumbar fusion group (group II, n = 27), and the thoracic spine fusion group (group III, n = 14). Sagittal (ADS) and coronal (ADC) angles for adjacent segments were measured from two disc spaces above lesions at the upper margins, to two disc spaces below lesions at the lower margins. Sagittal (TLS) and coronal (TLC) angles of the thoracolumbar junction were measured from the lower margin of the 11th thoracic vertebra body to the upper margin of the 2nd lumbar vertebra body on plane radiographs. Adjacent segment disc heights and disc signal changes were determined using simple spinal examinations and by magnetic resonance imaging. Clinical outcome indices were determined using a visual analog scale.
RESULTS
The three groups demonstrated statistically significant differences in terms of angle changes by ANOVA (p < 0.05). All angles in group I showed significantly smaller angles changes than in groups II and III by Turkey's multiple comparison analysis. Coronal Cobb's angles of the thoracolumbar spine (TLC) were not significantly different in the three groups.
CONCLUSION
Postoperative sagittal balance is expected to change in the adjacent and thoracolumbar areas after thoracic spine fusion. However, its prevalence seems to be higher when the thoracolumbar spine is included in instrumented fusion.
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