Abstract

Between 1989 and 1994, 50 patients suffering from congenital atlantoaxial dislocation with either an assimilated atlas or a thin or deficient posterior arch of the atlas were treated with occipitocervical fusion using the technique described by Jain and colleagues in 1993 with a few modifications. An artificial bridge created from the occipital bone along the margin of the foramen magnum was fused to the axis using sublaminar wiring and interposed strut and lateral onlay bone grafts. Ten patients (20%) also underwent atlantoaxial lateral joint fusion by intraarticular instillation of bone chips. In 22 patients (44%) with irreducible dislocation, posterior fusion was preceded by transoral odontoidectomy. In seven patients (14%) with ventral compression, who showed marked clinical improvement on traction despite radiological evidence of persisting atlantoaxial dislocation, occipitocervical fusion was performed without ventral decompression. Seven patients (14%) underwent a single-stage transoral odontoidectomy and posterior fusion. There was no perioperative mortality and the osseous fusion rate was 88%. Of the 43 patients available at follow-up examination (range 3-12 months), 31 patients (72.09%) improved, seven (16.28%) remained the same, and five (11.6%) deteriorated in comparison with their preoperative status. Hence, this technique achieves a stable occipitocervical arthrodesis without supplemental external orthoses and facilitates early postoperative mobilization.

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