The treatment of C2 fractures with collar, halo or surgery can all be justified depending on the patient. In our unit, primary treatment is with a halo: in a previous study presented at BASS we found an 85% fusion rate. In a follow on study, we wished to assess the outcome in those patients who underwent surgical treatment. The discharge logbook was examined retrospectively to identify patients who had posterior instrumentation for C2 fractures from 2008-2010 inclusive. Discharge summaries, clinic letters and radiology images/reports from PACS were analysed to obtain data regarding primary treatment, outcome, necessity for delayed treatment and radiological evidence of union.Purpose
Methods
To review the accuracy of our systematic process in preventing wrong level lumbar microdiscectomy. X-ray is used to identify the correct level for the skin incision to be made, x-ray is again used if the surgeon is in doubt prior performing the flavotomy. Following a lumbar microdiscectomy a Watson Chane is inserted into the empty disc space and an intra-operative x-ray is taken to confirm the level the discectomy has occurred. Observers A and B independently reviewed intra-operative x-ray in patients undergoing lumbar microdiscectomies and correlated the accuracy of the x-ray in determining correct level surgery against the pre-operative MRI scan and the preposed level of surgery. 123 patients, 66 males and 57 females underwent 127 lumbar microdiscectomy procedures between 2007 and 2009. The levels where surgery occurred are;- L2/3 -1 patient, L3/4–8 patients, L4/5–53 patients and L5/S1-65 patients. Kappa coefficient was used to determine inter-observer and Pearson Correlation coefficient was used to determine the X-ray and MRI relationship Percentage of patients who required a pre-flavotomy x-ray level check are:- L2/3–100%, L3/4-63%, L4/5–45%, and L5/S1–40%. Pearson's correlation in confirming the level lumbar microdiscectomy was performed using final x-ray and the pre-operative MRI scan was 1. Kappa coefficient between observer A and B was 1. This process of using intra-operative x-ray in determining the exact level where lumbar microdiscectomy was performed is 100% accurate. This is our standard process in preventing wrong level surgery for lumbar microdiscectomy.
The Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospital, Liverpool, UK Plasmacytoma is the localised form of multiple myeloma, which can affect any part of the body including the axial skeleton (Kelly et al, 2006; Ampil et al, 1995). These myelomas/plasmacytomas arise from one malignant clone of cells, which secrete the same type of immunoglobulin. Where the clone of cells remains localised, it is known as plasmacytoma, but when there is spread of the malignancy to multiple bones and marrow, it is known as multiple myeloma (Boccadoro and Pileri, 1995). We present a case of solitary sacral bone plasmacytoma (SBP), in a seventy year old man which presented as low back pain, following a fall. He was neurologically intact, and had no sphincteric incontinence, but MRI revealed a large expansile lesion in S1, which caused severe spinal stenosis, involving the left L5 exiting foramen, with an irregular area of low signal posteriorly. Bone scan showed increased tracer uptake in L5 and a mixed hot/photopaenic appearance in the mid-sacral region indicating tumor involvement. Myeloma screen confirmed that the serum IgA was high, with positive kappa monoclonal band, positive Bence Jones Protein (BJP), normal IgM and IgG, and normal calcium profile. CT-guided biopsy revealed sheets of mature plasma cells, consistent with the diagnosis. Fine needle aspiration biopsy of an enlarged groin lymph node revealed neoplastic infiltration, consistent with myeloma. Skeletal survey and CT chest/abdomen/pelvis (CAP) were not contributory. The patient had six courses of radiotherapy and improved remarkably, and is being considered for chemotherapy as well as follow up in the out-patients' department.