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Int J Surg Case Rep ; 67: 66-70, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32018215

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Complications in the upper thoracic spine are not uncommon after corrective surgery for deformities in adults and adolescents. Proximal junctional failure has been linked to structural osseous or ligamentous failure and proximal junctional kyphosis has been described as an increase in preoperative proximal kyphosis. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 20-year-old male patient intervened after atypical development of idiopathic scoliosis, with rapid progression nearing skeletal maturity. While an increase in the magnitude of the main thoracic curve in the coronal plane was observed, the progression of structural sagittal plane deformity of the proximal thoracic curve was not identified due to poor visualization. This resulted in improper identification of curve type and choice of fusion levels, with progressive residual kyphosis across follow-up. At the age of 27, the patient was re-intervened by means of pedicle subtraction osteotomy in the apical area of the proximal thoracic deformity. Although an adequate correction was achieved, the remaining deformity of 50° and the proximal failure required extending the instrumentation and fusion to the cervical spine. This has shown itself to be an effective technique for correction of proximal residual or progressive symptomatic fixed kyphosis, thereby avoiding the morbidity of the anterior or combined approaches. CONCLUSIONS: In adolescent deformity, an adequate preoperative planning including clinical and radiological study must be carried out, paying special attention to the sagittal plane to identify major and minor structural curves. The pedicle subtraction osteotomy, despite being a demanding technique and not entirely risk-free, has shown itself to be an effective corrective technique.

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