Surgical treatment for congenital vertebral anomalies with bilateral bifid intrathoracic rib in association: A series of five cases

Author:

Zhang Hanwen1,Zhu Lining2,Jiao Jiahao1,Guo Dong1,Zhang Xuejun1,Yao Ziming1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedics, Beijing Children’s Hospital, Capital Medical University, National Center for Children’s Health, Beijing, P.R. China

2. Department of Orthopaedics, Hainan Children’s Hospital, Haikou, P.R. China

Abstract

Background: Congenital scoliosis is often associated with costal deformities, of which a bilateral bifid intrathoracic rib is very rare. The aim of this study was to retrospectively summarize the clinical manifestations, imaging characteristics, treatment strategies, and postoperative outcomes of five patients with bilateral bifid intrathoracic rib. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the imaging findings and medical records of five pediatric patients (two girls, three boys) with bilateral bifid intrathoracic rib who were surgically treated for congenital kyphoscoliosis (mean age = 8 years). The clinical manifestations, imaging characteristics, treatment strategies, and postoperative outcome were summarized. Results: Four of five patients showed abnormalities from birth. All five patients presented with kyphoscoliosis and a fused vertebral body or lamina. The bilateral bifid intrathoracic rib was located at T2–3 in three patients, T7 in one patient, and T10 in one patient. Various congenital spinal deformities and multiple system malformations were present in all five patients. Three patients had preoperative neurological deficits. For corrective surgery, one patient received a traditional growing rod implantation, one patient underwent resection of a bony septum, and three patients underwent spinal osteotomy. One patient suffered complete paralysis of the lower limbs after surgery. Conclusion: Bilateral bifid intrathoracic rib is a rare anomaly that typically occurs in patients with serious kyphoscoliosis. Bilateral bifid intrathoracic rib patients show similar clinical and radiological characteristics and are likely to exhibit neurological deficits before or following corrective surgery. Spinal surgeons should be aware of the high risk of permanent neurological complications related to surgery in these patients. Level of evidence: level IV.

Funder

Beijing Talents Fund

Beijing Hospitals Authority Youth Programme

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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