Spine
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Retrospective study. ⋯ The prevalence of scoliosis in our patients ≥ 40 years old was 8.85% and was associated with age and race, but not with gender. Most curves in our population were mild; curve severity was associated with race but not with age or gender.
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Case-control study. ⋯ Both the discs of the adjacent level and the level one above experienced higher tensile and shear deformations during end ranges of lumbar motion in the patients with DDD before surgical treatments when compared with the healthy subjects. The larger disc deformations at the cephalic segments were otherwise not detectable using conventional magnetic resonance imaging techniques. Future studies should investigate the effect of surgical treatments, such as fusion or disc replacement, on the biomechanics of the adjacent segments during end ranges of lumbar motion.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Index and adjacent level kinematics after cervical disc replacement and anterior fusion: in vivo quantitative radiographic analysis.
Prospective, randomized trial. ⋯ TDR with the porous coated motion implant is able to restore and maintain lordotic alignment and disc height and maintain angular motion while allowing for similar translation to that seen before surgery. In contrast, after ACDF, the superior adjacent level developed increased angular motion compared with preoperative range of motion. This study provides in vivo data regarding the functioning of TDR and ACDF and their impact on adjacent-level kinematics.
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A safe controlled instrumented reduction technique for cervical osteotomy in ankylosing spondylitis.
A retrospective review of clinical and radiologic outcome in 13 consecutive patients with Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS) who underwent cervical osteotomy for correction of fixed cervicothoracic kyphotic deformity (CTKD) using an innovative technique. ⋯ This innovative new technique provides for a safe, controlled reduction for cervical osteotomy for fixed cervicothoracic kyphosis in AS. The technique reliably renders rigid immobilization that obviates the risk of intra- and postoperative junctional subluxation, eliminates the need for postoperative halo-vest immobilization, and achieves satisfactory fusion.
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Retrospective case series. ⋯ Postoperative cervical hyperlordosis may adversely affect graft stability in the early postoperative period of the surgery of corpectomy and reconstruction with dynamic plate fixation.