外伤性颈椎脱位的延迟治疗1例报告及文献复习

IF 0.4 Q4 ORTHOPEDICS
Fabian Roland Bechet, P. Stassen, Dan Scorpie, Thierry Della Siega
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引用次数: 0

摘要

未复位的颈椎脱位是非常罕见的。在我们的病例中(一位在发展为颈臂痛之前无症状持续了13个月的女士),前路复位/关节融合术很容易,由于C7和T1椎体之间的先天性阻塞,我们没有发现额外的后路手术有任何好处。然而,这一点仍是一个有争议的问题。在回顾文献后,我们没有找到任何共识的理想方案和顺序,以减少和稳定这种延迟型颈椎外伤。我们强调需要动态x线片来排除不稳定的损伤,但也需要预复位MRI(特别是在无法检查的患者中)来检测任何危险的椎间盘碎片。如果在试图通过外部手法复位脱位时放射学状态没有明显变化,那么仅通过单一入路成功复位的机会很小。因此,在不可复位的迟发性脱位中,似乎更安全的做法是在复位/融合阶段(前位或后位,取决于外科医生的习惯和技能)前一阶段进行对侧纤维组织的释放(后位释放小关节或前位释放椎间盘),然后进行复位/融合阶段,然后进行第三阶段锁定水平。像许多作者一样,我们建议在MRI上看到椎间盘突出的情况下首先采用前路手术,因此,我们在不可复位的迟发性颈椎脱位中优先采用前-后-前路手术。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Delayed Treatment of Traumatic Cervical Dislocation: A Case Report and Literature Review
Neglected unreduced cervical dislocation is very uncommon. In our case (a lady who stayed asymptomatic for 13 months before development of cervicobrachialgia), the anterior reduction/arthrodesis was easy, and we did not find any benefit from an additional posterior procedure thanks to a congenital block between C7 and T1 vertebral bodies. This point is nevertheless a matter of debate. After a review of the literature, we did not find any consensus about the ideal scheme and sequence to reduce and stabilize this delayed type of cervical trauma. We emphasize the need of dynamic radiographies to exclude unstable injuries but also a prereduction MRI (especially in unexaminable patients) to detect any dangerous disc fragment. If there is no visible change in the radiological status while attempting to reduce the dislocation by external maneuvers, there is little chance to reduce it successfully only by a single approach. Therefore, in irreducible delayed dislocations, it seems safer to prepare the reduction/fusion stage (either anterior/posterior, depending on the habits and skills of the surgeon) by a first stage carrying out a release of the fibrous tissues on the opposite side (either posterior to release the facet joints or anterior to release the intervertebral disc), followed by the reduction/fusion stage itself and then by a third stage to lock the level. Like many authors, we recommend an anterior approach first in case of an extruded disc visible on the MRI, and therefore, we show a preference for the anterior-posterior-anterior sequence in irreducible delayed cervical dislocations.
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