Experimental external fixation combined with percutaneous discectomy in the management of scoliosis.

1999 
Study Design. An assessment of the value of external fixation with or without percutaneous discectomy for the management of scoliosis in young rabbits with induced progressive thoracic scoliosis. Objectives. To investigate in an experimental setting the effect of external fixation with or without percutaneous discectomy for the management of scollosis, as a preliminary study to precede clinical consideration. of Background Data. External fixation of the spine using percutaneous transpedicular screws has been used clinically for cases of traumatic spinal injury, infectious spine, or chronic low back pain caused by a disc lesion. Percutaneous discectomy for the management of scoliosis has been reported Methods. Thirty-two young rabbits underwent partial resection of the right lower ribs. Nine rabbits were not treated after production of scollosis and were followed as controls. At 4-6 weeks after production of scollosis in 23 animals Kirschner wires were inserted percutaneously into the T9-T10 and L1-L2 disc space, and both ends were attached to an external fixator after correction of the scoliosis. In 8 of those 23 animals, percutaneous discectomy was also performed at the apex of the caudai compensatory curvature. Results. in these 23 animals, the initial correction bv fixation of the caudai vertebrae was accompanied by a derotation in the apex. Five animals treated with external fixation only and four treated with combined percutaneous discectomy survived with external fixation until the age of 17 weeks and were followed to the natural cessation of the curve progression, at which the fixation was removed and a final assessment was made. The mean progression of curvature was 15.8° in the group of five animals with external fixation only, and 33.8° in the controls, in the group of four animals treated with supplementary percutaneous discectomy, however, the treated disc space became rigid, and the mean progression of curvature after removal of the fixation was only 5.3°. Conclusions. The results of the current study suggest the potential for external fixation to allow for derotation and, when combined with percutaneous discectomy, to offer a feasible method of managing scoliosis in the human adolescent. This study was a preliminary experimental study; further experimental studies are planned to develop this novel technique.
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