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Escoliose idiopática do adolescente com curva entre 70 e 100 graus:

A liberação anterior é necessária ?

Comentário:

Com o avanço dos implantes de instrumentação da escoliose idiopática, a abordagem com liberação anterior tem sido cada vez menos empregada. A liberação anterior reduz os riscos de pseudoartrose e permite uma maior correção da curva, mas com os instrumentais de 3ª geração disponíveis, os resultados são similares e os riscos da abordagem anterior são evitados.

Dr Jefferson Soares Leal
FONTE: Spine. 2005;30:2061–2067. Available at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi
PubMed ID: 16166896

Thoracic Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis Curves Between 70° and 100°.
Is Anterior Release Necessary?
Luhmann SJ, Lenke LG, Kim YJ, Bridwell KH, Schootman M

Abstract
Study Design. A retrospective review of adolescents with main thoracic scoliotic curves surgically treated with either anterior release and posterior fusion or posterior fusion only.

Objectives. To compare the radiographic and clinical outcomes of two surgical treatments:
anterior-posterior spinal fusion (APSF) versus posterior spinal fusion (PSF) alone in patients with large 70° to 100° thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) curves.

Summary of Background Data. Surgical treatment of thoracic AIS curves between 70° and 100° often consists of anterior and posterior fusion to improve the coronal correction and fusion rate, with the anterior release and fusion performed through either an open thoracotomy or by video-assisted thoracoscopy.

Methods. All patients (n 84) with main thoracic major AIS curves between 70° and 100° who underwent spinal fusion (APSF or PSF) at one center between 1987 and 2001 were included for analysis. The minimum follow-up was 2 years after surgery (mean, 4.5 years; range, 2.0 –10.2 years). The mean age of patients was 13.8 years (range, 10.7–18.2 years), with 66 females and 18 males. Multiple radiographic measures were assessed. The primary and secondary statistical analyses performed were nonparametric analyses, using the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney tests for the primary analysis of APSF and PSF groups. The PSF subgroup analysis was performed with the Kruskal-Wallis test.

Results. There were 22 patients in the APSF (open ASF in 18, and video-assisted thoracoscopy in 4) group and 62 patients in the PSF group. There were no statistically significant differences between the groups for gender, age, number of levels fused, Cobb measurement of preoperative coronal or sagittal thoracic curve magnitude, or coronal curve flexibility.

The APSF group, when compared with the PSF group, had greater intraoperative correction of the coronal curve (48.3° vs. 38.7°, P 0.0087) as well as final overall correction (47.2° vs. 34.2°, P 0.0008). There were no significant differences seen in the sagittal alignment from T5–T12 (P 0.3150) or the SRS outcomes data between the APSF and PSF only groups.

Subanalysis of the PSF only group identified three distinct groups based on implants: hookonly constructs (n 36), hybrid constructs of proximal hooks and distal pedicle screws (n15), and pedicle screw-only constructs (n 11). Pedicle screw-only constructs corrected the coronal Cobb measurements more than the other two groups (47.5° vs. hooks 37.7° vs. hybrid 34.4°, P 0.0110), and to a similar extent as to the APSF group with no statistically significant difference in coronal correction (PSF, 47.5°; APSF 48.3°; P 0.9014), nor any other parameter except for sagittal T5–T12 changes. There were no reoperations for implant failure/pseudarthroses in any of the patients.

Conclusion. APSF of large thoracic curves allows greater coronal correction of thoracic curves between 70° and 100°, when compared with PSF alone using thoracic hook constructs, but not with the use of thoracic pedicle screw constructs. Scoliosis surgeons not using pedicle screw constructs need to decide if the modest improvement in coronal correction with a combined approach justifies its routine use in this patient population.

Veja o artigo completo em: Spine. 2005;30:2061–2067. Available at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi
PubMed ID: 16166896

 

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