Abstract

Most VATS approaches are from the right side for pathologies involving the middle and upper thoracic spine because there is a greater working spinal surface area lateral to the azygos vein than that lateral to the aorta. Below T-9, a left-sided approach is made possible because the aorta moves away from the left posterolateral aspect of the spine to an anterior position as it passes through the diaphragm. VATS has been used extensively in spinal deformities such as scoliosis. The use of VATS in spine surgery includes the treatment of thoracic prolapsed disk diseases, vertebral osteomyelitis, fracture management, vertebral interbody fusion, tissue biopsy, anterior spinal release, and fusion without or with instrumentation (VAT-I) for spinal deformity correction. As the knowledge and the comfort of using such techniques have expanded, the indications have extended to corpectomy for tumor resections. In the field of minimally invasive surgery, VATS now acts as a keyhole to the thoracic spine and an alternative to open thoracotomy for the treatment of several spinal conditions.Although VATS can be performed in such spine conditions, it is most beneficial in the treatment of scoliotic deformity, which requires taking a multilevel approach, from the upper to the lower thoracic spine.

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