Abstract

The lumbar spine is the most common sites for fractures because of the high mobility of the lumbar spine. A spinal cord injury usually begins with a sudden, traumatic blow to the spine that fractures or dislocates vertebrae. A 32-year-old man presented to us after traffic accident. In our patient, unstable fracture-dislocation of the lumbar spine at the L2-L3 level due to traffic accident occurred. The vertebral bodies were fractured and the anterior dislocation happened without spinal cord injury. The patient was a candidate for an open reduction and internal fixation surgery. The posterolateral approach was performed. After insertion of all the pedicle screws, the rods were transversally placed on L2-L3-L4 vertebral bodies and tightened. The reduction of the dislocations was carried out by pushing downwards (foreside) L2 and L4 vertebras and upwards (backside) L3 vertebrae, simultaneously. After securing the reduction of the dislocations, the rods were opened and placed along the spinal column and tightened. This technique is more effective when the pedicle of fractured vertebrae is intact.

Highlights

  • Approximately 160,000 patients sustain spinal column injuries in the United States [1]

  • We report a case of lumbar fracture-dislocation treated with unique surgical technique

  • The patient was a candidate for an open reduction and internal fixation surgery

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Approximately 160,000 patients sustain spinal column injuries in the United States [1]. Common injuries resulting in fractures of the lumbar spine include fall from a height, motor. (2014) Surgical Management of an Unstable Lumbar Fracture-Dislocation—A Case Report. Because of the energy required to cause these spinal fractures, patients often have additional injuries that require treatment. According to Denis’ system, spinal traumas are classified to minor and major injury, based on their potential risks to cause instability. Traumatic fracture-dislocation is a high-energy trauma that is classified into major spinal injuries categories and presents with failure of all three columns under compression, tension, rotation, or shear [6]. We report a case of lumbar fracture-dislocation treated with unique surgical technique

Case Presentation
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call