The clinical records, operation records, X-rays and CT-scans of 160 operatively treated patients with A-type and B-type spinal fractures were evaluated in a retrospective study. The preoperative diagnosis was compared with the postoperative diagnosis. Analysis of characteristics of patients with A-type fractures (without the unrecognised B-type fractures), initially unrecognised B-type (uB) fractures, and B-type fractures (without the unrecognised B-type fractures) was performed. We analysed the age of the patients, the respective fracture levels, neurologic deficit, anterior wedge angles (AWA), anterior corporal height (ACH), posterior corporal height (PCH), and the percentage of frontal corporal collapse (FCC). The t-test was used for statistical analysis. The mean age of patients in each group did not show a significant difference. The group of unrecognised B-fractures had a more caudal fracture level than the recognised B-type fractures. The fracture levels of the A-group and the uB-group patients showed no difference using the t-test. The percentage of patients with spinal fractures with neurologic deficit is 16% in the A-type fracture group, 12% in the uB-fracture group and 50% in the B-type group. The preoperative classification of patients in the A-group and in the uB-group showed that patients in the uB-group have more than proportional relatively simple preoperative A-fractures. The AWA and ACH did not show significant differences between the groups. The mean PCH of the uB-group was higher than the PCH of the A-group. No differences were measured between the uB-group and the B-group. The mean percentages of frontal corporal collapse (FCC) did not show a significant difference. Thirty percent of B-type fractures are misdiagnosed when plain X-rays and CT scans with 2D reconstructions are used as the only preoperative diagnostic tools. A large PCH with a normal interspinous distance should raise the suspicion of a B-type lesion. A large AWA does not point to a ligamentary B-type fracture.
In order to study the effect of dorsal spondylodesis on intervertebral movement in patients treated for thoracolumbar fractures, we measured the sagittal range of motion (ROM) in the segments above and below the fractured vertebral body 2 years after operation. Between 1991 and 1996, 82 consecutive patients with a fracture of the thoracolumbar spine (T12, L1, L2 and L3) were treated operatively with open reduction and stabilisation using an internal fixator, combined with transpedicular cancellous bone graft and dorsal spondylodesis. Eighteen T12, 42 L1, 17 L2 and 5 L3 fractures were included. The range of motion of two segments above and two segments below fracture level was measured. This was done on plain flexion and extension radiographs. The data were compared to normal values and to the zero distribution with the Kolmogorov-Smimov test. At all fracture levels the ROM of the segment adjacent to the disturbed endplate of the fractured body was zero (K-S test). All other evaluated segments showed significant loss of ROM (P<0.05) compared to normal values, except segment L1-L2 in L3 fractures (P=0.058). Dorsal spondylodesis at the level of the disturbed endplate in thoracolumbar spinal fractures leads to immobility in this segment, measured on flexion-extension radiographs 2 years after primary operative treatment. More than 50% loss of motion in the two adjacent levels is equivalent to complete loss of ROM in a second segment.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations –citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.