28 were applied under local anaesthetic (LA), one with LA and sedation and 8 were applied under general anaesthetic (either for another trauma procedure or due to head injury). All halos applied were Bremer Halo Crown with Classic or Classic II vest (DePuy Spine, Warsaw, IN, USA). Indications for application included fractures (n=21), tumours (n=6) or subluxations (n=10). 8 patients required pin repositioning. This was due to poor position (n=2), pain (n=5) and pin loosening (n=1, 3%). Pin site infection was diagnosed using an accepted definition2. This occurred in 5 patients. 3 settled with antibiotics, one with debridement and one with repositioning. Overall infection rate was 13.5%, which compares favourably with published rates of 20–22%. Pin site infection dropped significantly after introduction of a pin care regimen introduced and published by our limb reconstruction team The halo vest was a cause of significant morbidity in terms of pressure ulceration (3 patients) pneumonia (3 ventilated ITU patients of whom 2 died) and pain in one patient.
Our pin site infection rate dropped significantly after use of our limb reconstruction teams pin care regimen. We now utilise this regimen in all halo patients with good effect. A prospective study is ongoing.
There was correlation between fluoroscopic copies and virtual trajectories. This image guidance system may not only aid in the placement of pedicle instrumentation but also assist the senior surgeon in trainee supervision.