Author:
P. Oprel Pim,Tuinebreijer Wim E,Patka Peter,den Hartog Dennis
Abstract
Study Design:
A systematic quantitative review of the literature.
Objective:
To compare combined anterior-posterior surgery versus posterior surgery for thoracolumbar fractures in order to identify better treatments.
Summary of Background Data:
Axial load of the anterior and middle column of the spine can lead to a burst fracture in the vertebral body. The management of thoracolumbar burst fractures remains controversial. The goals of operative treatment are fracture reduction, fixation and decompressing the neural canal. For this, different operative methods are developed, for instance, the posterior and the combined anterior-posterior approach. Recent systematic qualitative reviews comparing these methods are lacking.
Methods:
We conducted an electronic search of MEDLINE, EMBASE, LILACS and the Cochrane Central Register for Controlled Trials.
Results:
Five observational comparative studies and no randomized clinical trials comparing the combined anteriorposterior approach with the posterior approach were retrieved. The total enrollment of patients in these studies was 755 patients. The results were expressed as relative risk (RR) for dichotomous outcomes and weighted mean difference (WMD) for continuous outcomes with 95% confidence intervals (CI).
Conclusions:
A small significantly higher kyphotic correction and improvement of vertebral height (sagittal index) observed for the combined anterior-posterior group is cancelled out by more blood loss, longer operation time, longer hospital stay, higher costs and a possible higher intra- and postoperative complication rate requiring re-operation and the possibility of a worsened Hannover spine score. The surgeons’ choices regarding the operative approach are biased: worse cases tended to undergo the combined anterior-posterior approach.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Reference20 articles.
1. Hu R, Mustard CA, Burns C.
Epidemiology of incident spinal fracture in a complete population
Spine
1996;
21
(4)
: 492-9.
2. Knop C, Blauth M, Buhren V, et al.
Surgical treatment of injuries of the thoracolumbar transition. 1: Epidemiology
Unfallchirurg
1999;
102
(12)
: 924-35.
3. Denis F.
The three column spine and its significance in the classification of acute thoracolumbar spinal injuries
Spine
1983;
8
(8)
: 817-31.
4. Yi L, Jingping B, Gele J, Baoleri X, Taixiang W.
Operative versus non-operative treatment for thoracolumbar burst fractures without neurological deficit
Cochrane Database Syst Rev
2006;
(4):
CD005079.
5. Verlaan JJ, Diekerhof CH, Buskens E, et al.
Surgical treatment of traumatic fractures of the thoracic and lumbar spine: A systematic review of the literature on techniques, complications, and outcome
Spine
2004;
29
(7)
: 803-14.