This review of the literature presents the current understanding of Scheuermann’s kyphosis and investigates the controversies concerning conservative and surgical treatment. There is considerable debate regarding the pathogenesis, natural history and treatment of this condition. A benign prognosis with settling of symptoms and stabilisation of the deformity at skeletal maturity is expected in most patients. Observation and programmes of exercise are appropriate for mild, flexible, non-progressive deformities. Bracing is indicated for a moderate deformity which spans several levels and retains flexibility in motivated patients who have significant remaining spinal growth. The loss of some correction after the completion of bracing with recurrent anterior vertebral wedging has been reported in approximately one-third of patients. Surgical correction with instrumented spinal fusion is indicated for a severe kyphosis which carries a risk of progression beyond the end of growth causing
Only a few studies have investigated the long-term health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with an idiopathic scoliosis. The aim of this study was to investigate the overall HRQoL and employment status of patients with an idiopathic scoliosis 40 years after diagnosis, to compare it with that of the normal population, and to identify possible predictors for a better long-term HRQoL. We reviewed the full medical records and radiological reports of patients referred to our hospital with a scoliosis of childhood between April 1972 and April 1982. Of 129 eligible patients with a juvenile or adolescent idiopathic scoliosis, 91 took part in the study (71%). They were evaluated with full-spine radiographs and HRQoL questionnaires and compared with normative data. We compared the HRQoL between observation (n = 27), bracing (n = 46), and surgical treatment (n = 18), and between thoracic and thoracolumbar/lumbar (TL/L) curves.Aims
Methods
To systematically evaluate whether bracing can effectively achieve curve regression in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS), and to identify any predictors of curve regression after bracing. Two independent reviewers performed a comprehensive literature search in PubMed, Ovid, Web of Science, Scopus, and Cochrane Library to obtain all published information about the effectiveness of bracing in achieving curve regression in AIS patients. Search terms included “brace treatment” or “bracing,” “idiopathic scoliosis,” and “curve regression” or “curve reduction.” Inclusion criteria were studies recruiting patients with AIS undergoing brace treatment and one of the study outcomes must be curve regression or reduction, defined as > 5° reduction in coronal Cobb angle of a major curve upon bracing completion. Exclusion criteria were studies including non-AIS patients, studies not reporting p-value or confidence interval, animal studies, case reports, case series, and systematic reviews. The GRADE approach to assessing quality of evidence was used to evaluate each publication.Aims
Methods
To determine the value of scoliosis surgery, it is necessary to evaluate outcomes in domains that matter to patients. Since randomized trials on adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) are scarce, prospective cohort studies with comparable outcome measures are important. To enhance comparison, a core set of patient-related outcome measures is available. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcomes of AIS fusion surgery at two-year follow-up using the core outcomes set. AIS patients were systematically enrolled in an institutional registry. In all, 144 AIS patients aged ≤ 25 years undergoing primary surgery (median age 15 years (interquartile range 14 to 17) were included. Patient-reported (condition-specific and health-related quality of life (QoL); functional status; back and leg pain intensity) and clinician-reported outcomes (complications, revision surgery) were recorded. Changes in patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) were analyzed using Friedman’s analysis of variance. Clinical relevancy was determined using minimally important changes (Scoliosis Research Society (SRS)-22r), cut-off values for relevant effect on functioning (pain scores) and a patient-acceptable symptom state (PASS; Oswestry Disability Index).Aims
Methods
To report the outcome of spinal deformity correction through anterior spinal fusion in wheelchair-bound patients with myelomeningocele. We reviewed 12 consecutive patients (7M:5F; mean age 12.4 years (9.2 to 16.8)) including demographic details, spinopelvic parameters, surgical correction, and perioperative data. We assessed the impact of surgery on patient outcomes using the Spina Bifida Spine Questionnaire and a qualitative questionnaire.Aims
Methods
Introduction:. Shoulder balance after surgery is one main attribute of the
There remains debate regarding which surgical approach gives the best outcome, anterior alone or posterior alone, in surgically relevant adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. The operation is mainly
It is not known how parents of children with scoliosis perceive
Introduction. Internal transpedicular fixation for the treatment of scoliosis develops quite fast and is widely used in clinical practice. The purpose of the study was to assess the efficacy of internal transpedicular fixation in treatment of patients with scoliosis. Material and methods. The system of internal transpedicular fixation (Vertebra Stabilization System Ø 5.5-6.35, OIM, Turkey) was employed for treatment of 50 patients with scoliosis of various severity. There was 83% of female patients aged from 15 to 23 years. Clinical and radiological methods were used for assessment of treatment results. Results. An angle of scoliotic deformity measured 40-60° in 20 cases, 60-100° in 21 patients, and more than 100° in 9 cases. Two-staged procedure was produced for two patients, and one-staged intervention for 33 cases. The length of in-patient treatment was five days. The patients could sit on the bed on the next day after the surgery, walk after 3 days, and were discharged from the hospital after 5 days for the follow-up. The deformity was corrected by 95-100% in the group of patients with scoliosis of 40-60°. The deformity was corrected by 85-90% in the group of patients with scoliosis of 60-100°. One-staged procedure allowed for 70-75% correction in patients with scoliosis more than 100°. Discussion and conclusion. The results of treatment showed no loss of correction at one-year follow-up. Patient aged more than 20 showed changing the deformity angle by 2-5° due to degenerative changes of the spine. No complications associated with inflammation of soft tissues, broken metal constructs were observed in this cohort of patients. Long-term follow-ups were evaluated from one to two years. All the patients were satisfied with their
To describe the clinical, radiological, and functional outcomes in patients with isolated congenital thoracolumbar kyphosis who were treated with three-column osteotomy by posterior-only approach. Hospital records of 27 patients with isolated congenital thoracolumbar kyphosis undergoing surgery at a single centre were retrospectively analyzed. All patients underwent deformity correction which involved a three-column osteotomy by single-stage posterior-only approach. Radiological parameters (local kyphosis angle (KA), thoracic kyphosis (TK), lumbar lordosis (LL), pelvic tilt (PT), sacral slope (SS), C7 sagittal vertical axis (C7 SVA), T1 slope, and pelvic incidence minus lumbar lordosis (PI-LL)), functional scores, and clinical details of complications were recorded.Aims
Methods
In major procedures like scoliosis surgery, parents are often asked to sign the consent on behalf of children because of the pretext that minor may have limited understanding and judgement about the procedure. Scoliosis surgery for patients with AIS is mainly indicated for
Introduction. There is no consensus among scoliosis surgeons on which surface topography method and parameters may be used as an alternative to serial radiography to monitor scoliosis progression. The aim of this study was to evaluate the inter-correlation among surface rotation (4-D formetric II) with 3-D Quantec scan and 2-D cobb's angle measurements for assessing torso asymmetry in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Materials & Methods. A prospective cohort of consecutive 24 patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis was accrued from the departmental scoliosis surface topography database. This group comprised of conservatively treated, Spinecor brace treated and postoperative patients in order to assess the wider utility and validity of 2 different surface topography methods (Formetric II & Quantec Spinal Imaging System). Parameters assessed were Q-angle, Suzuki hump sum, Posterior Trunk Symmetry Index (POTSI), surface rotation (rms), surface rotation (max) and maximum Cobb's angle on concurrently done scoliograms. Results. There were 3 male and 21 female patients (87.5%) at a mean age of 14.1 years (range, 10-20 years). Maximum Cobb's angle ranged from 9 degrees to 80 degrees. There was a significant correlation between Cobb angle (mean-35.1°) and Q-angle (mean-21.8°). Scatter plot and regression analysis showed a linear relationship between surface rotation (mean-9.9 root mean square) and POTSI (mean-42.5) as well as Q-angle. Suzuki hump sum was a less reliable parameter. Conclusions. Formimetric scans showed a linear correlation and reproducibility in patients with AIS receiving conservative treatment for smaller magnitude curves, when compared to Quantec scan. Due to ease of use, colourful and multi-mode representation of spinal deformity, Formetric may have an edge of preference for better clinic consultation to patient/parental appreciation of
To report the surgical outcome of patients with severe Scheuermann’s kyphosis treated using a consistent technique and perioperative management. We reviewed 88 consecutive patients with a severe Scheuermann's kyphosis who had undergone posterior spinal fusion with closing wedge osteotomies and hybrid instrumentation. There were 55 males and 33 females with a mean age of 15.9 years (12.0 to 24.7) at the time of surgery. We recorded their demographics, spinopelvic parameters, surgical correction, and perioperative data, and assessed the impact of surgical complications on outcome using the Scoliosis Research Society (SRS)-22 questionnaire.Aims
Methods
Purpose. This study aims to identify factors that influence the Cobb angle at presentation to a tertiary referral scoliosis centre, and the outcome of the referrals. Methods. 81 consecutive patients referred were reviewed retrospectively. Hospital database, clinic letters and radiographs were examined. Patient demographics, mode of referral (GP vs. tertiary), severity and type of scoliosis were recorded. The season of referral was defined as ‘warm’ between months of June and September, and ‘cold’ between November and March. Cobb angle measurements were made independently on digital radiographs by 2 Orthopaedic trainees. Results. There were 60 females and 21 males referred. Of these patients, 31 (38%) were offered surgery. The overall mean Cobb angle was 43° (SD 22.5°), where the surgical group was 58° (SD 20°) and the non-surgical group was 33° (SD 18°), p < 0.05. The mean age of the patients for surgery was 22, compared to 19 in the non-operative group (p < 0.05). There was no significant influence of sex, season of referral, and mode of referral on operations offered. Males had a higher mean Cobb angle (52°) than female (39°) with marginal significance (p = 0.09). Advancing age correlated with increasing Cobb angle (r = 0.2, p = 0.09) with marginal significance. No other factors influenced the presenting Cobb angle. There was excellent inter-observer agreement in the Cobb angle measurements (α = 0.99). Conclusion. High Cobb angle and age were the only significant predictors for requirement of surgery in a tertiary referral scoliosis centre. Secondary or tertiary referral did not influence the severity or the outcome of patients with scoliosis. This may imply that GP direct referrals to scoliosis centres are sufficient, especially if Cobb angle measurements and age are included in the criteria. Seasonal differences in scoliosis presentation were not found, however further comparison can be made with countries with warmer climate to demonstrate the
We have investigated whether patients with adolescent-onset idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) are more likely to have a low body-weight. Measurements of weight, height and body mass index (BMI) were made in 44 young women with AIS and compared with age- and gender-adjusted normative data. The body mass criteria of the International Classification of Diseases for eating disorders was used to determine how many patients were within the range considered to be ‘eating disordered’. Compared with the normative data, the AIS group did not differ significantly in terms of height, (p = 0.646), but they were significantly lighter (p <
0.001) and had significantly lower BMI scores (p <
0.001); 25% of the series had BMI scores which were within the range considered to be anorexic. The relationship between a diagnosis of AIS and low body-weight may indicate disordered eating and is thus a cause for concern, particularly in the light of the well-established relationship between eating psychopathology and osteoporosis. Aspects of organic health may need to be considered in addition to the
Whether a combined anteroposterior fusion or a posterior-only fusion is more effective in the management of patients with Scheuermann’s kyphosis remains controversial. The aim of this study was to compare the radiological and clinical outcomes of these surgical approaches, and to evaluate the postoperative complications with the hypothesis that proximal junctional kyphosis would be more common in one-stage posterior-only fusion. A retrospective review of patients treated surgically for Scheuermann’s kyphosis between 2006 and 2014 was performed. A total of 62 patients were identified, with 31 in each group. Parameters were compared to evaluate postoperative outcomes using chi-squared tests, independent-samples Aims
Methods
Purpose of the study. Two patients with very severe thoracolumbar Scheuermann's kyphosis who developed spontaneous bony fusion across the apex of the deformity are presented and their treatment, as well as surgical outcome is discussed. Summary of Background Data. Considerable debate exists regarding the pathogenesis, natural history and treatment of Scheuermann's kyphosis. Surgical correction is indicated in the presence of severe kyphosis which carries the risk of neurological complications, persistent back pain and significant
The direct posterior approach with subperiosteal dissection of the paraspinal muscles from the vertebrae is considered to be the standard approach for the surgical treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). We investigated whether or not a minimally-invasive surgery (MIS) technique could offer improved results. Consecutive AIS patients treated with an MIS technique at two tertiary centres from June 2013 to March 2016 were retrospectively included. Preoperative patient deformity characteristics, perioperative parameters, power of deformity correction, and complications were studied. A total of 93 patients were included. The outcome of the first 25 patients and the latter 68 were compared as part of our safety analysis to examine the effect of the learning curve.Aims
Methods
We performed a systematic review of the literature to determine the safety and efficacy of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) compared with bone graft when used specifically for revision spinal fusion surgery secondary to pseudarthrosis. The MEDLINE, EMBASE and Cochrane Library databases were searched using defined search terms. The primary outcome measure was spinal fusion, assessed as success or failure in accordance with radiograph, MRI or CT scan review at 24-month follow-up. The secondary outcome measure was time to fusion.Objectives
Methods
Acute angulation at the thoracolumbar junction
with segmental subluxation of the spine occurring at the level above
an anteriorly hypoplastic vertebra in otherwise normal children
is a rare condition described as infantile developmental thoracolumbar
kyphosis. Three patient series with total of 18 children have been
reported in the literature. We report five children who presented
with thoracolumbar kyphosis and discuss the treatment algorithm. We
reviewed the medical records and spinal imaging at initial clinical
presentation and at minimum two-year follow-up. The mean age at
presentation was eight months (two to 12). All five children had
L2 anterior vertebral body hypoplasia. The kyphosis improved spontaneously
in three children kept under monitoring. In contrast, the deformity
was progressive in two patients who were treated with bracing. The
kyphosis and segmental subluxation corrected at latest follow-up
(mean age 52 months; 48 to 60) in all patients with near complete
reconstitution of the anomalous vertebra. The deformity and radiological
imaging on a young child can cause anxiety to both parents and treating
physicians. Diagnostic workup and treatment algorithm in the management
of infantile developmental thoracolumbar kyphosis is proposed. Observation
is indicated for non-progressive kyphosis and bracing if there is evidence
of kyphosis and segmental subluxation deterioration beyond walking
age. Surgical stabilisation of the spine can be reserved for severe
progressive deformities unresponsive to conservative treatment. Cite this article: