Fragility of L5 Vertebral Fracture After Rod Fracture at the Lumbosacral Junction Following Long-Segment Spinal Fusion Surgery for Adult Spine Deformity.

Cureus(2023)

Cited 0|Views9
No score
Abstract
We report a case of vertebral fracture in a patient with rod fractures after adult spinal deformity surgery, which occurred at the same level as the rod fractures, even though intervertebral bone fusion in the fusion range had been achieved. A 77-year-old female underwent corrective spinal surgery for adult spinal deformity from T12 to the pelvis but had a subsequent uppermost instrumented vertebral fracture, resulting in pseudarthrosis and severe kyphosis. The patient underwent proximal fusion extension to the T4, which improved alignment. A right-sided rod fracture at the lumbosacral junction occurred after 18 months; however, it showed no symptoms. After a month, the patient experienced severe low back pain with left leg pain and was diagnosed with bilateral rod fractures associated with L5 hyperextension vertebral fracture. The patient underwent revision surgery to repair the fractured rods with a multiple-rod construct. Rod fractures can occur even when bone fusion is achieved within the fusion range. When rod fractures are detected at the lumbosacral junction even if the interbody fusion was achieved, a hyperextension vertebral fracture may occur.
More
Translated text
Key words
fragility fracture, hyperextension vertebral fracture, lumbosacral junction, rod fracture, adult spinal deformity
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined