Infantile developmental thoracolumbar kyphosis with segmental subluxation of the spine

Author:

Tsirikos A. I.1,McMaster M. J.1

Affiliation:

1. Scottish National Spine, Deformity Centre, Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Sciennes Road, Edinburgh EH9 1LF, UK.

Abstract

We report five children who presented at the mean age of 1.5 years (1.1 to 1.9) with a progressive thoracolumbar kyphosis associated with segmental instability and subluxation of the spine at the level above an anteriorly-wedged hypoplastic vertebra at L1 or L2. The spinal deformity appeared to be developmental and not congenital in origin. The anterior wedging of the vertebra may have been secondary to localised segmental instability and subsequent kyphotic deformity. We suggest the term ‘infantile developmental thoracolumbar kyphosis with segmental subluxation of the spine’ to differentiate this type of deformity from congenital displacement of the spine in which the congenital vertebral anomaly does not resolve. Infantile developmental kyphosis with segmental subluxation of the spine, if progressive, may carry the risk of neurological compromise. In all of our patients the kyphotic deformity progressed over a period of three months and all were treated by localised posterior spinal fusion. At a mean follow-up of 6.6 years (5.0 to 9.0), gradual correction of the kyphosis was seen on serial radiographs as well as reconstitution of the hypoplastic wedged vertebra to normality. Exploration of the arthrodesis was necessary at nine months in one patient who developed a pseudarthrosis.

Publisher

British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

Reference15 articles.

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4. Dubousset J. Congenital kyphosis and lordosis. In: Weinstein SL, ed. The pediatric spine. New York: Raven Press, 1994:245–58.

5. Duval-Beaupere G, Dubousset J. Progressive rotational dislocation of the spine: mechanical process common to evolutive kyphoscoliosis complicated by neurologic disorder: a propos of 16 cases. Rev Chir Orthop Reparatrice Appar Mot 1972;58:323–34 (in French).

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