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Resolution: standard / high Figure 4.
Conventional open reduction and instrumentation with secondary anterior surgery in
a polytraumatized patient with compression fracture of T12 and complete burst fracture
of L1. This case features a 39 year old male patient following a fall from height (ISS
= 41). The patient was unconscious at the site of the injury and transferred after
tracheal intubation to the trauma centre. Following primary survey and whole-body
CT-Scan, severe traumatic brain injury with epidural hematoma, retroperitoneal bleeding
with bilateral lung contusions and instable spine injuries from a complete burst fracture
of L1 with substantial spinal canal compromise (type A3.3) and adjacent compression
fracture of T12 (type A1.2) were revealed (images A-D). The patient was positioned
prone and simultaneous surgery was performed for evacuation of epidural hematoma and
stabilization of the spine. Posterior fusion using a conventional approach was performed
to achieve optimized reduction of the posterior wall fragment and strongest stabilization
using a cross-link and bone graft (image E). Following uneventful recovery from intracranial
injuries, the patient was operated anterior using an expandable cage on day 10 post
trauma (images F-G). Removal of the internal fixator after 14 months released cranial
motion segment T11-T12 and showed sufficient bisegmental anterior fusion (images H-I).
(Adopted from Heyde CE, Stahel PF, Ertel W. "Was gibt es Neues in der Unfallchirurgie"
in: Meßmer, Jähne, Neuhaus: Was gibt es Neues in der Chirurgie? Ecomed Medizin 2005).
Schmidt et al. World Journal of Emergency Surgery 2009 4:9 doi:10.1186/1749-7922-4-9 |