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Treatment of Kyphotic Deformity in Kümmell's Disease Through Vertebral Body Screw Fixation and Intertransverse Process Grafting: A Case Report

Overview
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2024 Jan 26
PMID 38277546
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Abstract

Rationale: Kümmell's disease, also well acknowledged as delayed posttraumatic vertebral body collapse, it is a rare condition which mainly occurs in elderly people more than 50 years old, with the thoracolumbar junction being mostly affected.

Patient Concerns: In this research, we employed posterior short-segment screw fixation within the injured vertebral region, coupled with intertransverse process bone grafting, to address Kümmell's disease. A 57-year-old female was admitted to our institution with incapacitating back pain and obvious kyphotic deformity.

Diagnoses: The diagnosis of Kummell disease was mainly depended on clinical symptoms and imaging examinations.

Interventions: In this research, we employed posterior short-segment screw fixation within the injured vertebral region, coupled with intertransverse process bone grafting, to address Kümmell's disease.

Outcomes: The patient could walk independently with the help of a thoracolumbosacral orthosis brace on postoperative Day 2. No pains, kyphotic deformity and neurological deficits were observed during the 36 months of postoperative follow-up. These improvements can be visualized through postoperative magnetic resonance imaging and CT scans. Short-segment screw fixation provides short-term stability to the fracture site and accelerates fracture healing. Subsequently, the healed intervertebral and transverse process grafts offer long-term stability, a fact corroborated by postoperative CT scans.

Lessons: In summary, for Kümmell's disease patients exhibiting kyphotic deformity without neurological deficits or compression, posterior short-segment vertebral screw fixation with intertransverse process bone grafting stands as a viable alternative treatment approach.

Citing Articles

Efficacy and safety of hollow pedicle screw-anchored bone cement combined with posterior long-segment fixation for Stage III Kümmell's disease.

Kan D, Wang J, Qiao G, Chen Y, Han D Jt Dis Relat Surg. 2024; 36(1):15-23.

PMID: 39719897 PMC: 11734856. DOI: 10.52312/jdrs.2024.1834.


Hollow Screw Placement Combined with Percutaneous Vertebroplasty Serves as a Valuable Three-Column Intensive Treatment for Patients with Kummell's Disease and Pedicle Rupture.

Liu Y, Su Y, Luan Z, Hou X, Wu G, Xu Y J Pain Res. 2024; 17:2767-2774.

PMID: 39220225 PMC: 11363919. DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S469755.

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