Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective To evaluate the clinical and radiological results of posterior vertebral column resection in the treatment of kyphosis due to vertebral tuberculosis in children under 9 years of age with neurological deficit. Methods Retrospective study of a series of 5 cases, 4 females and 1 male, mean age of 4.7 years at the time of surgery, with spinal tuberculosis and mean kyphosis of 89 degrees. Results All patients underwent surgical treatment with PVCR in multiple levels, with a mean number of 3.6 resected vertebrae, mean surgical time of 359 minutes, mean postoperative stay of 21.2 days. The mean follow-up was 29 months. The mean kyphosis correction was 62.6%. Before surgery, all patients had signs of spinal cord injury, one of which did not present a deficit of strength or sensibility (ASIA E), but there were pyramidal signs and a history of falls. The other 4 had some degree of sensory-motor dysfunction, with ASIA score varying from A to D. Postoperative complications included two dehiscences of suture, one pneumothorax and one pneumonia, all with favorable evolution. Four patients progressed with neurological improvement and one of them had persistence of the neurological deficit until the last follow-up. Conclusions Multiple-level PVCR has proven to be a safe and effective option for the treatment of kyphotic deformity in spinal tuberculosis in children with neurological deficit. Level of evidence IV; Case Series.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease that has existed for millennia and remains a major global health problem

  • Severe kyphosis can result from many conditions, including congenital deformities, post-laminectomy kyphosis, trauma, bone dysplasia, neurofibromatosis, and granulomatous diseases.[3]

  • The objective of our study was to evaluate 5 patients under 9 years of age diagnosed with kyphosis secondary to TB and neurological deficit, who were treated using the multiple-level posterior vertebral column resection (PVCR) technique. This was a retrospective study of 5 patients with kyphosis from TB, one male and 4 female, who underwent multiple-level PVCR surgical correction of the deformity

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Summary

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease that has existed for millennia and remains a major global health problem. Progression to an esthetically significant deformity and neurological deficit are common outcomes.[5,6]

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