Abstract

BackgroundOccipitocervical and atlantoaxial instability in the pediatric population is a rare and challenging condition to treat. Variable surgical techniques have been employed to achieve fusion. The study aimed to assess bony fusion with rigid craniocervical fixation using an allograft bone block to serve as scaffold for bony fusion.MethodsThis is a single center case series from a tertiary referral neurosurgical center. The series includes 12 consecutive pediatric patients with rigid craniocervical fusion between 2006 and 2014. The primary outcome was bony fusion as assessed by computed tomography and flexion-extension radiographs. The authors did not receive external funding for this study.ResultsTwelve patients (age 1–15 years) were operated with a median imaging follow-up time of 22 months (range 6–69 m). A modified Gallie fusion technique with a tightly wired allograft bone block was used in 10 of 13 procedures. One patient underwent re-fixation due to screw breakage. Eleven out of 13 procedures resulted in a stable construct with bony fusion. All 10 patients operated with the modified Gallie fusion technique with sublaminar wiring of allograft bone block had bony fusion. No post-operative complications of the posterior fixation procedure were noted.ConclusionsThe modified Gallie fusion technique with allograft bone block without post-operative immobilization achieved excellent fusion. We conclude there is no need to use autograft or BMPs in craniocervical fusion in the pediatric population, which avoids related donor-site morbidity.Level of evidenceLevel IV—case series; therapeutic.

Highlights

  • Occipitocervical (OC) and atlantoaxial (AA) fusion in children may be indicated to treat craniocervical instability resulting from developmental, congenital, inflammatory, traumatic, and neoplastic disorders

  • Craniocervical instability in children is extremely rare, in some subpopulations like children Down syndrome [18], the incidence of symptomatic atlantoaxial subluxation is relatively high at 1–10%

  • We describe a single center case series of rigid cranial cervical fusion using allograft instead of autograft

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Summary

Introduction

Occipitocervical (OC) and atlantoaxial (AA) fusion in children may be indicated to treat craniocervical instability resulting from developmental, congenital, inflammatory, traumatic, and neoplastic disorders. Craniocervical instability in children is extremely rare, in some subpopulations like children Down syndrome [18], the incidence of symptomatic atlantoaxial subluxation is relatively high at 1–10%. Congenital occipitocervical instability may result from a. “deformity begets deformity” resulting in craniocervical kyphosis and progressive instability leading to nervous system damage by impingement of the high cervical spinal cord and brainstem. Variable surgical techniques have been employed to achieve fusion of the cranial-cervical junction in children. Occipitocervical and atlantoaxial instability in the pediatric population is a rare and challenging condition to treat. Variable surgical techniques have been employed to achieve fusion. The study aimed to assess bony fusion with rigid craniocervical fixation using an allograft bone block to serve as scaffold for bony fusion

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