Asian Spine J.  2009 Jun;3(1):27-31. 10.4184/asj.2009.3.1.27.

20-Year-Follow up of Treatment Using Spine Osteotomy and Halo-pelvic Traction for Tuberculous Kyphosis: A Case Report

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. hwanlee@yuhs.ac

Abstract

A 23-year-old male whose medical history included tuberculous spondylitis presented with a kyphotic deformity and incomplete paraplegia of twenty days duration. Preoperative radiographs demonstrated a T12-L4 kyphotic Cobb's angle of 100degrees with a complete block showing on the lumbar myelogram at L4-5. The patient underwent anterior osteotomy and release. After the operation, a halo-pelvic apparatus was fit onto the patient, and distraction was begun. After distraction for 2 months, posterior osteotomy and release was performed for final correction, and distraction was maintained for another three weeks. Finally, the kyphotic deformity was corrected to a Cobb's angle of 62degrees from T12 to L4. Supplementary anterior fusion was done, and the apparatus was removed after consolidation of the fusion mass.

Keyword

Tuberculous kyphosis; Halo-pelvic traction; Spine osteotomy

MeSH Terms

Congenital Abnormalities
Humans
Male
Osteotomy
Paraplegia
Spine
Spondylitis
Traction
Young Adult
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