Summary:
Introduction: The decision on the surgical approach in the operative treatment of the fractures of thoracolumbar spine is possible
only by following a detailed classification. However, the application of the classification systems is not reliable without
a complex imagination of the bony and fibrous structures involved into the fracture. Pre-op investigation should include x-rays,
CT-scans and MRI.
Material and methods: Patient series consists of 21 females and 43 males treated surgically for the unstable thoracolumbar
fracture during 2001. The average age was 43 years. Patients suffering form osteoporosis, fresh spinal cord injury and multiple
spine fractures were excluded. All fractures were examined by plain x-rays, CT-scans and MRI and classified according the AOASIF
classification system. In patients with A-type fractures the single anterior approach was used. Patients with B- or C-type
of fracture were operated by the posterior approach. These fractures were complementary classified according to the Load-sharing
classification and those with 6 or more points were additionally operated also from the front. Patients were divided into the
three groups: the anterior approach (22 pts), the combined procedure (22 pts) and the posterior approach (20 pts). In the third
group, the hardware was removed after 15 months on average. No posterolateral fusion was carried out. Minimum follow-up
was 22 months.
Results: No implant failure was found in any patient. No significant loss of correction was found in the first and the second
group. The loss of correction in the third group was 3.1 degree on average.
Conclusion: Overall graphical imagination of the thoracolumbar fractures (including MRI) is essential for their classification.
The classification helps to choose the optimum surgical approach. The approach related to the fracture classification prevents
the treatment failure.
Key words:
spine stability – thoracolumbar fractures – fracture classification – magnetic resonance imaging – surgical
approach
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