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Introduction. Spinal anomalies are considered to be the most severe pathology of the axial skeleton. Intrauterine formation of deformity with its subsequent progression during growth is the reason for the need for surgical intervention. The prevalence of patients with congenital scoliosis in the total structure of spinal deformities is up to 2%. In terms of the malignancy of the course of the disease, children with unsegmented rod and rib synostosis represent one of the most unfavorable groups of patients. Aim. To perform a comparative analysis of the results of surgical treatment of children with congenital scoliosis with unilateral lateral vertebral segmentation disorder and rib synostosis using different techniques. Methods. The work is a monocenter cohort study of “case-control” type (III level of evidence). The design of the work is a monocenter cohort retro and prospective study. The results of surgical treatment of patients between 2010 and 2020 were analyzed. The study included 45 patients aged 3 to 7 years with the diagnosis of congenital scoliosis with unilateral lateral segmentation disorder of vertebral bodies and rib synostosis. The patients were divided into 2 groups depending on the surgical treatment method applied. In the first group (n = 24), patients underwent thoracoplasty with implantation of an individual rib/rib/vertebral distractor; in the second group (n = 21), patients underwent spinal surgery in the scope of vertebrotomy at the apex of the curvature and correction of the deformity with a multifocal spinal system. The data of medical records, as well as MSCT, radiographs, and pulse oscillometry were included in the analysis of the results. Results. Me (median) of scoliosis before treatment in group 1 patients 58.5, IQR = 19.75; after treatment — Me = 40.0, IQR = 20.0. Me of kyphosis before surgery 22, IQR = 4.5; after surgery Me = 26.0, IQR = 4.0. In the second group, Me of scoliosis before treatment 58.0, IQR = 3.0; after treatment, Me = 20.0, IQR = 6.0. Me of kyphosis before surgery 22, IQR = 2.0; after surgery Me 28.0, IQR = 4.0. When comparing MSCT data, group 1 patients showed an increase in lung tissue volume by 21% of the initial lung volume, in group 2 the increase amounted to 27%. The analysis of external respiratory function indices demonstrates improvement of reactive component indices by 21.1%, frequency dependence of resistive component by 46.4%, resistive component by 50% in group 1 patients, in group 2 there is an improvement of reactive component indices by 21.1%, resistive component by 50.9% and frequency dependence of reactive component by 46.7%. Conclusion. Corrective intervention on the spine at an early age makes it possible to achieve effective correction of the deformity; similar changes are observed both in lung volume and functional state of the respiratory system due to the mediated correction of the thorax shape.
Introduction. Spinal anomalies are considered to be the most severe pathology of the axial skeleton. Intrauterine formation of deformity with its subsequent progression during growth is the reason for the need for surgical intervention. The prevalence of patients with congenital scoliosis in the total structure of spinal deformities is up to 2%. In terms of the malignancy of the course of the disease, children with unsegmented rod and rib synostosis represent one of the most unfavorable groups of patients. Aim. To perform a comparative analysis of the results of surgical treatment of children with congenital scoliosis with unilateral lateral vertebral segmentation disorder and rib synostosis using different techniques. Methods. The work is a monocenter cohort study of “case-control” type (III level of evidence). The design of the work is a monocenter cohort retro and prospective study. The results of surgical treatment of patients between 2010 and 2020 were analyzed. The study included 45 patients aged 3 to 7 years with the diagnosis of congenital scoliosis with unilateral lateral segmentation disorder of vertebral bodies and rib synostosis. The patients were divided into 2 groups depending on the surgical treatment method applied. In the first group (n = 24), patients underwent thoracoplasty with implantation of an individual rib/rib/vertebral distractor; in the second group (n = 21), patients underwent spinal surgery in the scope of vertebrotomy at the apex of the curvature and correction of the deformity with a multifocal spinal system. The data of medical records, as well as MSCT, radiographs, and pulse oscillometry were included in the analysis of the results. Results. Me (median) of scoliosis before treatment in group 1 patients 58.5, IQR = 19.75; after treatment — Me = 40.0, IQR = 20.0. Me of kyphosis before surgery 22, IQR = 4.5; after surgery Me = 26.0, IQR = 4.0. In the second group, Me of scoliosis before treatment 58.0, IQR = 3.0; after treatment, Me = 20.0, IQR = 6.0. Me of kyphosis before surgery 22, IQR = 2.0; after surgery Me 28.0, IQR = 4.0. When comparing MSCT data, group 1 patients showed an increase in lung tissue volume by 21% of the initial lung volume, in group 2 the increase amounted to 27%. The analysis of external respiratory function indices demonstrates improvement of reactive component indices by 21.1%, frequency dependence of resistive component by 46.4%, resistive component by 50% in group 1 patients, in group 2 there is an improvement of reactive component indices by 21.1%, resistive component by 50.9% and frequency dependence of reactive component by 46.7%. Conclusion. Corrective intervention on the spine at an early age makes it possible to achieve effective correction of the deformity; similar changes are observed both in lung volume and functional state of the respiratory system due to the mediated correction of the thorax shape.
BACKGROUND: Treatment of children with congenital deformity with unsegmented rod and rib synostosis is an important and topical problem to date. Topical publications present the results of surgical correction efficacy and analysis of treatment complications. The extremely important aspect of treatment efficacy assessment regarding changes in the function of external respiration is still topical. AIM: This study aimed to analyze the treatment results of children with congenital scoliosis and unilateral segmentation disorder of the lateral surfaces of the vertebral bodies and rib synostosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is a retrospective monocenter cohort study of the treatment outcomes of 30 patients aged 114 years. In the preoperative period, external respiration was evaluated by pulse oscillometry, multi-slice computed tomography, digital X-ray imaging of the craniopelvis in two projections. All patients underwent expanding thoracoplasty with osteotomy of the rib synostosis and fixation with a rib-costal or rib-vertebral distractor. Control studies were performed every 6 months after the surgical intervention. The average follow-up period was 2 years. Nonparametric analysis was applied to estimate the obtained data. RESULTS: The median (Me) age at the start of treatment was 6 years (interquartile range, 4.25; IQR hereafter). The Me scoliosis before treatment was 74 (IQR, 22.75). The Me scoliosis correction after the first stage of treatment was 16 (IQR, 11) and the second correction achieved 6 (IQR, 13). The Me kyphosis was 15 (IQR, 32), the first intervention improved kyphosis by 4 (IQR, 16), and the second by 6 (IQR, 11). Complications were represented by the destabilization of the metal construct in six cases, and trophic disorders of soft tissues were noted in four. The assessment of external respiratory function using IOM demonstrates reliable improvement of resistive component, reactive component, and frequency dependence of the resistive component (p 0,01). CONCLUSIONS: The assessment of the external respiratory function in young children and analysis of reference values may allow their use as absolute indications for surgical treatment in children with congenital scoliosis with unsegmented bar and rib synostosis.
BACKGROUND: Congenital anomalies of vertebral development account for 2%–11% of cases in the general structure of nosologies that cause spinal deformity. An unsegmented rod (unilateral violation of vertebral segmentation) is attributed to a prognostically unfavorable malformation. Rib synostosis causes the development of thoracic insufficiency syndrome. AIM: To analyze the results of treatment of children with congenital scoliosis caused by an unsegmented rod and rib synostosis by vertebrotomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This cohort, retrospective, monocenter study evaluated the treatment results of 55 patients. The patients were divided into two groups: group 1, children aged 2–8 years, the scope of intervention was wedge-shaped osteotomy of a non-segmented rod at the apex of the deformity, and group 2, children aged 8–18 years, the scope of intervention was wedge-shaped osteotomy at the apex of the deformity and two linear osteotomies of a non-segmented rod in the cranial and caudal directions. Clinical, radiological, and statistical research methods were used. RESULTS: Significant correction of scoliosis was achieved in 65.5% of patients aged 2–7 years (group 1) and 56.3% in children aged 8–18 years (group 2). Hypokyphosis of the thoracic spine was observed in the patients. The percentage of correction of kyphosis was 21.1% in group 1 and 19.1% in group 2. Lung volume increased by 27.9% (p = 0.01776) in group 1, and lung volume on the concave side increased by 23.5% (p = 0.04975) and on the convex side by 29.6% (p = 0.01073). Improvement in the overall respiratory impedance reached 47.3% (p 0.05). In group 2, a insignificant increase was found in VVC by 12.6% (p = 0.3509) and FEV1 by 8.7% of the initial (p = 0.1534), as well as an increase in total lung volume of 13.3% (p = 0.1527) and the contribution of the lung along the concave side of 18.8% (p = 0.1535), and the lung along the convex side was 8.4% (p = 0.169), indicating no significant impact on lung development and function. CONCLUSIONS: In children with spinal deformity caused by a non-segmented rod with normal respiratory function, vertebrotomy at the apex of the deformity with subsequent correction and stabilization of the spinal deformity is recommended. Performing simultaneous multilevel osteotomies of a non-segmented rod allows for significant correction of rigid spinal deformity.
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