The clinical courses of 60 patients with hemangiopericytoma of the somatic soft tissues are summarized in this retrospective study. The tumors were subjected to a comparative histologic review and classified as benign (12 lesions), borderline malignant (16 lesions), and malignant (32 lesions). Tumors with 1 mitotic figure per 10 high‐power fields and slight cellular anaplasia or 1 mitotic figure per 20 high‐power fields and moderate cellular anaplasia may be expected to follow a malignant clinical course. Six of the 16 tumors with these microscopic features (borderline lesions) metastasized (37.5%), and 6 exhibited local recurrences after excision. Of the 32 malignant tumors, 25 (78%) metastasized. Twenty‐three patients with malignant tumors were followed for more than 5 years or until death from tumor, and only one patient was alive and free of disease. Fifteen of the 23 patients experienced one of more local recurrences. None of the benign tumors metastasized. Surgical ablation of hemangiopericytoma is, in our experience, the only satisfactory method of treatment. Amputation of an extremity need be done only when the location of the lesion precludes a wide local excision. Local recurrent tumor was experienced by 22 patients after an inadequate local excision. Long‐term follow‐up is recommended because metastasis became apparent in 11% of patients with malignant tumors and 7% with borderline tumors after 5 “disease‐free” years.
Fifteen patients with ankylosing spondylitis who had developed a severe flexion deformity of the cervical spine which restricted their field of vision to their feet, were treated by an extension osteotomy at the C7/T1 level. The operation was performed under general anaesthesia with the patient in the prone position and wearing a halo-jacket. Three had internal fixation using a Luque rectangle and wiring. Their mean age was 48 years. Before operation the mean cervical kyphosis was 23 degrees; this was corrected to a mean of 31 degrees of lordosis, a mean correction of 54 degrees. All the patients were able to see straight ahead. One patient with normal neurology soon after operation became quadriparetic after one week; two others had unilateral palsy of the C8 root, which improved. There was subluxation at the site of osteotomy in four patients, and two of them developed a pseudarthrosis which required an anterior fusion.
All patients with a Type I or Type III congenital kyphosis or kyphoscoliosis should be treated by a posterior arthrodesis before the age of 5 years and before the kyphosis exceeds 50 degrees. A kyphosis that does not reduce to less than 50 degrees as measured on the lateral spine radiograph made with the patient supine requires an anterior release and arthrodesis with strut grafting followed by posterior arthrodesis with instrumentation (if possible).
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