Han Qiao, Xiaofei Cheng, Haijun Tian, Changqing Zhao, Xiaojiang Sun, Jie Zhao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cervical andersson lesions (ALs) are rare in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), and even more rare in patients with simultaneous superior cervical atlantoaxial fracture and dislocation. Here, we present a case of C1 Jefferson fracture (C1 bilateral posterior arch fracture), C2 odontoid, lateral mass, vertebral fracture (nonclassic C2 hangman fracture), traumatic posterior atlantoaxial dislocation (AAD) and C6/C7 AL in a long-standing AS cervical spine. The patient with traumatic AS-related cervical fractures underwent a two-stage surgery. The stage I surgery involved a posterior atlantoaxial reduction and fixation surgery combined with C5/C6/T1/T2 posterior pedicle screw fixation plus C6/C7 decompression. One week later, C6/C7 anterior cervical corpectomy decompression and fusion (ACCF) with long anterior plate stabilization combined with iliac crest bone graft transplantation was performed for stage II surgery. The patient recovery observed during follow-up was satisfactory. Nine-month postoperative radiological images revealed fracture union of the upper and lower cervical spine with optimal reduction of the atlantoaxial segment. In conclusion, lower cervical ALs with simultaneous upper cervical C1/C2 fractures in the AS are very rare. Posterior C1-C2 fixation combined with C6-C7 AL corpectomy/fusion and posterior pedicle screw fixation may offer a desirable alternative approach for this complex case of cervical trauma. During treatment, complete decompression, effective reduction, and potent stabilization can comprehensively improve the clinical prognosis.
期刊介绍:
Evidence of surgical interventions go back to prehistoric times. Since then, the field of surgery has developed into a complex array of specialties and procedures, particularly with the advent of microsurgery, lasers and minimally invasive techniques. The advanced skills now required from surgeons has led to ever increasing specialization, though these still share important fundamental principles.
Frontiers in Surgery is the umbrella journal representing the publication interests of all surgical specialties. It is divided into several “Specialty Sections” listed below. All these sections have their own Specialty Chief Editor, Editorial Board and homepage, but all articles carry the citation Frontiers in Surgery.
Frontiers in Surgery calls upon medical professionals and scientists from all surgical specialties to publish their experimental and clinical studies in this journal. By assembling all surgical specialties, which nonetheless retain their independence, under the common umbrella of Frontiers in Surgery, a powerful publication venue is created. Since there is often overlap and common ground between the different surgical specialties, assembly of all surgical disciplines into a single journal will foster a collaborative dialogue amongst the surgical community. This means that publications, which are also of interest to other surgical specialties, will reach a wider audience and have greater impact.
The aim of this multidisciplinary journal is to create a discussion and knowledge platform of advances and research findings in surgical practice today to continuously improve clinical management of patients and foster innovation in this field.