Journal of Craniovertebral Junction and Spine (May 2024)

Construct length analysis of type B and C cervical and thoracolumbar fractures

  • Jeremy C. Heard,
  • Mark J. Lambrechts,
  • Yunsoo Lee,
  • Teeto Ezeonu,
  • Delano R. Trenchfield,
  • Nicholas D. D’Antonio,
  • Azra N. Dees,
  • Bright M. Wiafe,
  • John J. Mangan,
  • Jose A. Canseco,
  • Barrett I. Woods,
  • Ian David Kaye,
  • Alan S. Hilibrand,
  • Alexander R. Vaccaro,
  • Christopher K. Kepler,
  • Gregory D. Schroeder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jcvjs.jcvjs_17_24
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
pp. 196 – 204

Abstract

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Objectives: The purpose of this study is to identify if construct length affects the rate of surgical complications and instrumentation revision following surgical fixation of subaxial and thoracolumbar Type B and C fractures. This study evaluates the effect of ankylosing spondylitis/diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (AS/DISH) within this population on outcomes. Methods: Retrospective review of 91 cervical and 89 thoracolumbar Type B and C fractures. Groups were divided by construct length for analysis: short-segment (constructs spanning two or less segments adjacent to the fracture) and long-segment (constructs spanning more than two segments adjacent to the vertebral fracture). Results: For cervical fractures, construct length did not impact surgical complications (P = 0.641), surgical hardware revision (P = 0.167), or kyphotic change (P = 0.994). For thoracolumbar fractures, construct length did not impact surgical complications (P = 0.508), surgical hardware revision (P = 0.224), and kyphotic change (P = 0.278). Cervical Type B fractures were nonsignificantly more likely to have worsened kyphosis (P = 0.058) than Type C fractures. Assessing all regions of the spine, a diagnosis of AS/DISH was associated with an increase in kyphosis (P = 0.030) and a diagnosis of osteoporosis was associated with surgical hardware failure (P = 0.006). Conclusion: Patients with short-segment instrumentation have similar surgical outcomes and changes in kyphosis compared to those with long-segment instrumentation. A diagnosis of AS/DISH or osteoporosis was associated with worse surgical outcomes.

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