Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurosurgery, University of Rochester, Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, United States
2. Medical School, Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, United States
3. Department of Orthopaedics, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, United States.
Abstract
Background:
Resection of intramedullary spinal cord tumors (IMSCTs) in pediatric patients results in a high incidence of spinal deformity (i.e., kyphoscoliosis often requiring fusion). Here, a 6-year-old male underwent a spinal fusion to correct postlaminectomy thoracic kyphosis following resection of an IMSCT.
Case Description:
A 6-year-old male initially underwent multilevel thoracic laminectomies for resection of an IMSCT. Six months later, he presented with the onset of kyphoscoliosis. During adolescence he became increasingly paraparetic due to a thoracic kyphosis that had now progressed to 118°. He underwent a 360 decompression/fusion that included a T1-T9 laminectomy, a T5 to T11 anterior interbody arthrodesis/rib autograft, and posterolateral T2-T12 fusion/iliac crest autograft with Harrington rods placed from T5 to T12. Postoperative radiographs showed the thoracic kyphosis improved to 62°. However, 4.5 years later, X-rays showed the thoracic kyphosis newly progressed to 90° (i.e., from T3 to T12). Thirty-four years after this corrective surgery, he remained neurologically intact with only mild complaints of balance changes, and bladder/bowel urgency while radiographs confirmed continued stability. Further, the thoracic magnetic resonance imaging showed only chronic thoracic spine/cord changes.
Conclusion:
A 6-year-old child originally underwent a thoracic laminectomy for an IMSCT. As an adolescent, due to progressive postlaminectomy kyphosis, he underwent a successful secondary thoracic 360° decompression/ fusion. Notably, 34 years later, he did not require any surgical revision.
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Surgery