12 results on '"Wolinksy JP"'
Search Results
2. Use of TachoSil for durotomy repair in spine surgery: a single-center retrospective review.
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Chaliparambil RK, Kemeny HR, Mukherjee S, Krushelnytskyy M, Wolinksy JP, Swong K, Dahdaleh NS, Ahuja CS, and El Tecle NE
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Aged, Adult, Spine surgery, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Thrombin therapeutic use, Fibrinogen therapeutic use, Dura Mater surgery, Drug Combinations, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak surgery, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak etiology, Postoperative Complications
- Abstract
Objective: A significant complication of spine surgery is persistent postoperative CSF leak secondary to intentional or incidental durotomy. Traditionally, the gold standard for repair of simple durotomy has been primary surgical repair; however, this technique alone may not be possible for more complex durotomy and is often supplemented with sealants or fibrin glues. The authors add to the literature the largest series of spine surgery patients treated with TachoSil, a synthetic collagen patch containing human fibrinogen and human thrombin, for the management of incidental or intentional durotomy., Methods: The authors identified all patients who underwent a spinal operation and were billed for operative use of TachoSil at their institution between January 1, 2023, and November 3, 2023. Demographic, clinical, and outcome variables were collected and analyzed using standard statistical methods. Categorical variables were reported as number (%), and continuous variables were reported as median (range)., Results: The authors retrieved 55 patients meeting their inclusion criteria. The population consisted of 29 (52.7%) females, had a median age of 52 years, and had a median BMI of 28.3 kg/m2. Of the repaired durotomies, 37 (67.3%) were intentional to the operation and 18 (32.7%) were incidental or secondary to trauma. Abnormal residual fluid collections were appreciated in 1 (1.8%) patient. Wound breakdown was observed in 2 (3.6%) patients. Thirty-day readmission was observed in 6 (10.9%) patients, and 30-day reoperation was necessary in 2 (3.6%) patients. Ninety-day readmission was observed in 7 (12.7%) patients and 90-day reoperation was necessary in 3 (5.5%) patients. One (1.8%) case of 30-day readmission was related to CSF leak, and no cases of 30-day or 90-day reoperation were related to dural closure failure., Conclusions: This study is a brief examination of the demographic characteristics, surgical variables, and outcomes of durotomy repair in spine surgery with TachoSil and provides encouraging results for the continued use of the material in this context. This study provides the impetus for examination of TachoSil in larger, multi-institutional studies to establish it as a standard of care in spinal dural repair.
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- 2025
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3. Outpatient telemedicine in neurosurgery: 15,677 consecutive encounters in a comparative analysis of its effectiveness and impact on the surgical conversion rate.
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Hopkins BS, Cloney MB, Texakalidis P, Karras CL, El Tecle N, Swong K, Ganju A, Stricsek G, Wolinksy JP, Potts MB, Jahromi BS, Koski T, and Dahdaleh NS
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- Humans, Outpatients, Pandemics, Neurosurgical Procedures, Neurosurgery, COVID-19 epidemiology, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Objective: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has necessitated the use of telehealth visits (THVs). The effects on neurosurgical practice have not been well characterized, especially concerning new-patient THVs. Therefore, the authors of this study reviewed their institution's experience with outpatient clinic visits and THVs from before the COVID-19 pandemic to the present to focus on clinical metrics, rates of surgery, and the effects of implementing THVs in order to better understand their implications for clinical practice as more data emerge over time., Methods: The authors reviewed 15,677 consecutive new outpatient in-person visits (IPVs), THVs, and neurosurgical procedures/cases proceeding from their institution between 2018 and 2022 for trends and associations related to THVs., Results: Among spine patients, there was no difference in the proportion of encounters that led to surgery (surgical conversion rate) between THVs and IPVs (p = 0.49). Among cranial patients, THVs were negatively associated with conversion (OR 0.73, p = 0.03). On average, patients using THVs lived further from the hospital (p < 0.001); however, the patient catchment area appeared unchanged. The median distance to the hospital among THV patients was counterbalanced by a decreased distance for spine patients pursing IPVs (p < 0.001), with no significant change to case volume. There was no change in distance to the hospital among cranial patients. For both cranial and spine patients, surgical conversion was more likely among those who lived a great distance from the hospital if their initial encounter was an IPV (p = 0.007 and < 0.001, respectively). However, there was no relationship between distance from the hospital and surgical conversion among THV patients (p = 0.565). The availability of THVs did not significantly affect follow-up time (p = 0.837). For new patients at IPVs, there was no difference in time to the operating room between cranial and spine cases; for new patients at THVs, however, time to the operating room was significantly faster for cranial cases than for spine cases (p = 0.0018)., Conclusions: Compared to IPVs, THVs lead to decreased surgical conversion for cranial patients but not spine patients. THVs do not appear to increase the catchment area. For patients who live far from the hospital, an IPV is associated with surgical conversion. Surgical conversion is faster following cranial THVs than after spine THVs. THVs did not increase the duration of follow-up.
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- 2023
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4. Vascularized Bone Grafting for Reconstruction of Oncologic Defects in the Spine: A Systematic Review and Pooled Analysis of the Literature.
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Pedreira R, Siotos C, Cho BH, Seal SM, Bhat D, Carl HM, Seu M, Wolinksy JP, and Sacks JM
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- Free Tissue Flaps blood supply, Graft Survival physiology, Humans, Spinal Neoplasms complications, Spine pathology, Treatment Outcome, Bone Transplantation methods, Plastic Surgery Procedures methods, Spinal Neoplasms surgery, Spine surgery
- Abstract
Background: Resection of primary spinal tumors requires reconstruction for restoration of spinal column stability. Traditionally, some combination of bone grafting and instrumentation is implemented. However, delayed healing environments are associated with pseudoarthrodesis and failure. Implementation of vascularized bone grafting (VBG) to complement hardware may present a solution. We evaluated the use of VBG in oncologic spinal reconstruction via systematic review and pooled analysis of literature., Methods: We searched PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane, and Scopus for studies published through September 2017 according to the PRISMA guidelines and performed a pooled analysis of studies with n > 5. Additionally, we performed retrospective review of patients at the Johns Hopkins Hospital that received spinal reconstruction with VBG., Results: We identified 21 eligible studies and executed a pooled analysis of 12. Analysis indicated an 89% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.75-1.03) rate of successful union when VBG is employed after primary tumor resection. The overall complication rate was 42% (95% CI: 0.23-0.61) and reoperation rate was 27% (95% CI: 0.12-0.41) in the pooled cohort. Wound complication rate was 18% (95% CI: 0.11-0.26). Fifteen out of 209 patients (7.2%) had instrumentation failure and mean time-to-union was 6 months. Consensus in the literature and in the patients reviewed is that introduction of VBG into irradiated or infected tissue beds proves advantageous given decreased resorption, increased load bearing, and faster consolidation. Downsides to this technique included longer operations, donor-site morbidity, and difficulty in coordinating care., Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that complication rates using VBG are similar to those reported in studies using non-VBG for similar spinal reconstructions; however, fusion rates are better. Given rapid fusion and possible hardware independence, VBG may be useful in reconstructing defects in patients with longer life expectancies and/or with a history of chemoradiation and/or infection at the site of tumor resection., Competing Interests: The article submitted does not contain information about medical device(s)/drug(s). All authors declare no conflict of interest., (Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.)
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- 2018
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5. Virtual fluoroscopy for intraoperative C-arm positioning and radiation dose reduction.
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De Silva T, Punnoose J, Uneri A, Mahesh M, Goerres J, Jacobson M, Ketcha MD, Manbachi A, Vogt S, Kleinszig G, Khanna AJ, Wolinksy JP, Siewerdsen JH, and Osgood G
- Abstract
Positioning of an intraoperative C-arm to achieve clear visualization of a particular anatomical feature often involves repeated fluoroscopic views, which cost time and radiation exposure to both the patient and surgical staff. A system for virtual fluoroscopy (called FluoroSim) that could dramatically reduce time- and dose-spent "fluoro-hunting" by leveraging preoperative computed tomography (CT), encoded readout of C-arm gantry position, and automatic 3D-2D image registration has been developed. The method is consistent with existing surgical workflow and does not require additional tracking equipment. Real-time virtual fluoroscopy was achieved via mechanical encoding of the C-arm motion, C-arm geometric calibration, and patient registration using a single radiograph. The accuracy, time, and radiation dose associated with C-arm positioning were measured for FluoroSim in comparison with conventional methods. Five radiology technologists were tasked with acquiring six standard pelvic views pertinent to sacro-illiac, anterior-inferior iliac spine, and superior-ramus screw placement in an anthropomorphic pelvis phantom using conventional and FluoroSim approaches. The positioning accuracy, exposure time, number of exposures, and total time for each trial were recorded, and radiation dose was characterized in terms of entrance skin dose and in-room scatter. The geometric accuracy of FluoroSim was measured to be [Formula: see text]. There was no significant difference ([Formula: see text]) observed in the accuracy or total elapsed time for C-arm positioning. However, the total fluoroscopy time required to achieve the desired view decreased by 4.1 s ([Formula: see text] for conventional, compared with [Formula: see text] for FluoroSim, [Formula: see text]), and the total number of exposures reduced by 4.0 ([Formula: see text] for conventional, compared with [Formula: see text] for FluoroSim, [Formula: see text]). These reductions amounted to a 50% to 78% decrease in patient entrance skin dose and a 55% to 70% reduction in in-room scatter. FluoroSim was found to reduce the radiation exposure required in C-arm positioning without diminishing positioning time or accuracy, providing a potentially valuable tool to assist technologists and surgeons.
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- 2018
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6. C-arm Positioning Using Virtual Fluoroscopy for Image-Guided Surgery.
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De Silva T, Punnoose J, Uneri A, Goerres J, Jacobson M, Ketcha MD, Manbachi A, Vogt S, Kleinszig G, Khanna AJ, Wolinksy JP, Osgood G, and Siewerdsen JH
- Abstract
Introduction: Fluoroscopically guided procedures often involve repeated acquisitions for C-arm positioning at the cost of radiation exposure and time in the operating room. A virtual fluoroscopy system is reported with the potential of reducing dose and time spent in C-arm positioning, utilizing three key advances: robust 3D-2D registration to a preoperative CT; real-time forward projection on GPU; and a motorized mobile C-arm with encoder feedback on C-arm orientation., Method: Geometric calibration of the C-arm was performed offline in two rotational directions (orbit α, orbit β). Patient registration was performed using image-based 3D-2D registration with an initially acquired radiograph of the patient. This approach for patient registration eliminated the requirement for external tracking devices inside the operating room, allowing virtual fluoroscopy using commonly available systems in fluoroscopically guided procedures within standard surgical workflow. Geometric accuracy was evaluated in terms of projection distance error (PDE) in anatomical fiducials. A pilot study was conducted to evaluate the utility of virtual fluoroscopy to aid C-arm positioning in image guided surgery, assessing potential improvements in time, dose, and agreement between the virtual and desired view., Results: The overall geometric accuracy of DRRs in comparison to the actual radiographs at various C-arm positions was PDE (mean ± std) = 1.6 ± 1.1 mm. The conventional approach required on average 8.0 ± 4.5 radiographs spent "fluoro hunting" to obtain the desired view. Positioning accuracy improved from 2.6° ± 2.3° (in α) and 4.1° ± 5.1° (in β) in the conventional approach to 1.5° ± 1.3° and 1.8° ± 1.7°, respectively, with the virtual fluoroscopy approach., Conclusion: Virtual fluoroscopy could improve accuracy of C-arm positioning and save time and radiation dose in the operating room. Such a system could be valuable to training of fluoroscopy technicians as well as intraoperative use in fluoroscopically guided procedures.
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- 2017
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7. Somatic mutations of SUZ12 in malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors.
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Zhang M, Wang Y, Jones S, Sausen M, McMahon K, Sharma R, Wang Q, Belzberg AJ, Chaichana K, Gallia GL, Gokaslan ZL, Riggins GJ, Wolinksy JP, Wood LD, Montgomery EA, Hruban RH, Kinzler KW, Papadopoulos N, Vogelstein B, and Bettegowda C
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- Base Sequence, Computational Biology, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation genetics, Neoplasm Proteins, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Transcription Factors, Neurilemmoma genetics, Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 genetics
- Abstract
Neurofibromatosis 1 is a hereditary syndrome characterized by the development of numerous benign neurofibromas, a small subset of which progress to malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNSTs). To better understand the genetic basis for MPNSTs, we performed genome-wide or targeted sequencing on 50 cases. Sixteen MPNSTs but none of the neurofibromas tested were found to have somatic mutations in SUZ12, implicating it as having a central role in malignant transformation.
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- 2014
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8. Accuracy of C2 pedicle screw placement using the anatomic freehand technique.
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Bydon M, Mathios D, Macki M, De la Garza-Ramos R, Aygun N, Sciubba DM, Witham TF, Gokaslan ZL, Bydon A, and Wolinksy JP
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cervical Vertebrae pathology, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Spinal Fusion methods, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Pedicle Screws, Plastic Surgery Procedures, Spinal Diseases surgery
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study is to evaluate the incidence and prognostic factors of breach rates following the placement of C2 pedicle screws using the anatomic, freehand technique., Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of all patients who underwent C2 transpedicular instrumentation over six years at a single institution. All intraoperative, image-guided techniques were excluded. Breaches were ascertained from immediate postoperative CT images. All images were analyzed by three independent reviewers. The screw length was correlated with (1) the breach rate and (2) the breach severity. Severity of the breached screws reflects the screw circumference (0-360°) perforating the pedicle wall (Grade 1-Grade 4)., Results: Of the 341 C2 pedicle screws inserted in 181 patients, the average screw length was 22.93±3.7mm. The average distance from the foramen transversarium to the screw insertion point was 13.17±2.63mm. The distance from the medial rim of the pedicle to the dura of spinal cord was 3.53±1.57mm. Of the 341 screws, the overall breach rate was 17.3% (n=59). Of the 59 breaches, 89.83% of screws (n=53) breaching the spinal canal was statistically significantly higher than the 10.17% of screws (n=6) breaching the foramen transversarium (p<0.001). Moreover, 27 (45.8%) were Grade 1, 16 (27.1%) Grade 2, 6 (10.2%) Grade 3, and 10 (16.9%) Grade 4. None of the C2 breaches resulted in neurological sequela. No association was found between breach rate and gender, race or age. While the average screw length was 22.93±3.7mm [12-34mm], screw length did not predict a cortical violation (p=0.4) or severity of the breach (p=0.42) in a multiple regression model., Conclusions: In this cohort study on the anatomic freehand placement of C2 pedicle screws, the breach rate was 17.3%. Lateral breaches were more common than medial breaches. Screw length was not statistically correlated with cortical violation or severity of breach. Therefore, screw length is not a prognostic factor for C2 pedicle screw misplacement., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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9. Factors associated with improved outcomes following decompressive surgery for prostate cancer metastatic to the spine.
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Ju DG, Zadnik PL, Groves ML, Hwang L, Kaloostian PE, Wolinksy JP, Witham TF, Bydon A, Gokaslan ZL, and Sciubba DM
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- Adenocarcinoma mortality, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Decompression, Surgical, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Prostatic Neoplasms mortality, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Recovery of Function, Retrospective Studies, Spinal Cord Compression etiology, Spinal Cord Compression surgery, Spinal Neoplasms mortality, Treatment Outcome, Adenocarcinoma secondary, Adenocarcinoma surgery, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Spinal Neoplasms secondary, Spinal Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: Metastatic spinal cord compression from prostate cancer is a debilitating disease causing neurological deficits, mechanical instability, and intractable pain. Surgical management may improve quality of life., Objective: To define postoperative outcomes and explore associations with prolonged survival for patients with metastatic prostate cancer., Methods: Retrospective chart reviews were performed of all patients undergoing spinal surgery for metastatic cancer from June 1, 2002 to August 31, 2011. Patient demographics, surgical details, adjuvant therapies, outcomes, complications, and postoperative survival were reviewed., Results: Twenty-seven patients with prostate cancer underwent surgery at a median age of 65 years (range, 46-82 years). After surgery, 93% of patients had preserved or improved neurological status, 56% of nonambulatory patients recovered ambulation, 43% of incontinent patients recovered continence, and 23% experienced complications. Postoperative Frankel grades were significantly improved by at least 1 letter grade at 1 month (P = .03). The median analgesic and steroid usage was significantly lower up to 3 months and 6 months postoperatively, respectively (P = .007, .005). Median survival following surgery was 10.2 months, and patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer had a shorter median survival than those with hormone-naïve disease (9.8 vs 40 months). Better preoperative performance status was an independent predictor of survival (P = .02). Younger age (P = .005) and instrumentation greater than 7 spinal levels (P = .03) were associated with complications., Conclusion: Spinal surgery for prostate metastases improves neurological function and decreases analgesic requirements. Our findings support surgical intervention for carefully selected patients, and knowledge of preoperative hormone sensitivity and performance status may help with risk stratification.
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- 2013
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10. Short-term progressive spinal deformity following laminoplasty versus laminectomy for resection of intradural spinal tumors: analysis of 238 patients.
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McGirt MJ, Garcés-Ambrossi GL, Parker SL, Sciubba DM, Bydon A, Wolinksy JP, Gokaslan ZL, Jallo G, and Witham TF
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- Child, Humans, Incidence, Kyphosis etiology, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Retrospective Studies, Scoliosis etiology, Kyphosis epidemiology, Laminectomy adverse effects, Laminectomy methods, Scoliosis epidemiology, Spinal Cord Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Gross total resection of intradural spinal tumors can be achieved in the majority of cases with preservation of long-term neurological function. However, postoperative progressive spinal deformity complicates outcome in a subset of patients after surgery. We set out to determine whether the use of laminoplasty (LP) vs laminectomy (LM) has reduced the incidence of subsequent spinal deformity following intradural tumor resection at our institution., Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the records of 238 consecutive patients undergoing resection of intradural tumor at a single institution. The incidence of subsequent progressive kyphosis or scoliosis, perioperative morbidity, and neurological outcome were compared between the LP and LM cohorts., Results: One hundred eighty patients underwent LM and 58 underwent LP. Patients were 46 +/- 19 years old with median modified McCormick score of 2. Tumors were intramedullary in 102 (43%) and extramedullary in 102 (43%). All baseline clinical, radiographic, and operative variables were similar between the LP and LM cohorts. LP was associated with a decreased mean length of hospitalization (5 vs 7 days; P = .002) and trend of decreased incisional cerebrospinal fluid leak (3% vs 9%; P = .14). Following LP vs LM, 5 (9%) vs 21 (12%) patients developed progressive deformity (P = .728) a mean of 14 months after surgery. The incidence of progressive deformity was also similar between LP vs LM in pediatric patients < 18 years of age (43% vs 36%), with preoperative scoliosis or loss of cervical/lumbar lordosis (28% vs 22%), or with intramedullary tumors (11% vs 11%)., Conclusion: LP for the resection of intradural spinal tumors was not associated with a decreased incidence of short-term progressive spinal deformity or improved neurological function. However, LP may be associated with a reduction in incisional cerebrospinal fluid leak. Longer-term follow-up is warranted to definitively assess the long-term effect of LP and the risk of deformity over time.
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- 2010
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11. Factors associated with progression-free survival and long-term neurological outcome after resection of intramedullary spinal cord tumors: analysis of 101 consecutive cases.
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Garcés-Ambrossi GL, McGirt MJ, Mehta VA, Sciubba DM, Witham TF, Bydon A, Wolinksy JP, Jallo GI, and Gokaslan ZL
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- Adolescent, Adult, Astrocytoma mortality, Astrocytoma pathology, Astrocytoma surgery, Disease Progression, Disease-Free Survival, Ependymoma mortality, Ependymoma pathology, Ependymoma surgery, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hemangioblastoma pathology, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Recovery of Function, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Spinal Cord Neoplasms pathology, Therapeutics, Young Adult, Hemangioblastoma mortality, Hemangioblastoma surgery, Neurosurgical Procedures, Spinal Cord Neoplasms mortality, Spinal Cord Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Object: With the introduction of electrophysiological spinal cord monitoring, surgeons have been able to perform radical resection of intramedullary spinal cord tumors (IMSCTs). However, factors associated with tumor resectability, tumor recurrence, and long-term neurological outcome are poorly understood., Methods: The authors retrospectively reviewed 101 consecutive cases of IMSCT resection in adults and children at a single institution. Neurological function and MR images were evaluated preoperatively, at discharge, 1 month after surgery, and every 6 months thereafter. Factors associated with gross-total resection (GTR), progression-free survival (PFS), and long-term neurological improvement were assessed using multivariate regression analysis., Results: The mean age of the patients was 41 +/- 18 years and 17 (17%) of the patients were pediatric. Pathological type included ependymoma in 51 cases, hemangioblastoma in 15, pilocytic astrocytoma in 16, WHO Grade II astrocytoma in 10, and malignant astrocytoma in 9. A GTR was achieved in 60 cases (59%). Independent of histological tumor type, an intraoperatively identifiable tumor plane (OR 25.3, p < 0.0001) and decreasing tumor size (OR 1.2, p = 0.05) were associated with GTR. Thirty-four patients (34%) experienced acute neurological decline after surgery (associated with increasing age [OR 1.04, p = 0.02] and with intraoperative change in motor evoked potentials [OR 7.4, p = 0.003]); in 14 (41%) of these patients the change returned to preoperative baseline within 1 month. In 31 patients (31%) tumor progression developed by last follow-up (mean 19 months). Tumor histology (p < 0.0001) and the presence of an intraoperatively identified tumor plane (hazard ratio [HR] 0.44, p = 0.027) correlated with improved PFS. A GTR resulted in improved PFS for hemangioblastoma (HR 0.004, p = 0.04) and ependymoma (HR 0.2, p = 0.02), but not astrocytoma. Fifty-five patients (55%) maintained overall neurological improvement by last follow-up. The presence of an identifiable tumor plane (HR 3.1, p = 0.0004) and improvement in neurological symptoms before discharge (HR 2.3, p = 0.004) were associated with overall neurological improvement by last follow-up (mean 19 months)., Conclusions: Gross-total resection can be safely achieved in the vast majority of IMSCTs when an intraoperative plane is identified, independent of pathological type. The incidence of acute perioperative neurological decline increases with patient age but will improve to baseline in nearly half of patients within 1 month. Long-term improvement in motor, sensory, and bladder dysfunction may be achieved in a slight majority of patients and occurs more frequently in patients in whom a surgical plane can be identified. A GTR should be attempted for ependymoma and hemangioblastoma, but it may not affect PFS for astrocytoma. For all tumors, the intraoperative finding of a clear tumor plane of resection carries positive prognostic significance across all pathological types.
- Published
- 2009
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12. Translaminar versus pedicle screw fixation of C2: comparison of surgical morbidity and accuracy of 313 consecutive screws.
- Author
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Parker SL, McGirt MJ, Garcés-Ambrossi GL, Mehta VA, Sciubba DM, Witham TF, Gokaslan ZL, and Wolinksy JP
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Atlanto-Axial Joint diagnostic imaging, Atlanto-Axial Joint pathology, Atlanto-Axial Joint surgery, Axis, Cervical Vertebra diagnostic imaging, Axis, Cervical Vertebra pathology, Bone Screws adverse effects, Equipment Failure, Female, Fracture Fixation mortality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications mortality, Postoperative Complications prevention & control, Pseudarthrosis etiology, Pseudarthrosis prevention & control, Radiography, Reoperation, Retrospective Studies, Spinal Fusion mortality, Treatment Outcome, Vertebral Artery anatomy & histology, Vertebral Artery injuries, Vertebral Artery surgery, Axis, Cervical Vertebra surgery, Bone Screws standards, Fracture Fixation instrumentation, Fracture Fixation methods, Spinal Fusion instrumentation, Spinal Fusion methods
- Abstract
Objective: C2 translaminar (TL) screws rigidly capture the posterior elements of C2, avoid risk of vertebral artery injury, and are less technically demanding than C2 pedicle (PD) screws. However, a C2-TL screw breach places the spinal cord at risk, and the durability of C2-TL screws remains unknown. It is unclear if TL versus PD screw fixation of C2 is truly associated with less operative morbidity, greater accuracy of screw placement, or equivalent durability., Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the records of 167 consecutive patients undergoing posterior cervical fusion with either PD or TL screw fixation of C2. Perioperative morbidity, breach of the C2 lamina or pedicle on postoperative computed tomographic scans, and rates of operative revision were compared between PD and TL screw constructs in axial (C1-C2 or C1-C3) and subaxial (C2 and caudal) cervical fusions., Results: In total, 152 C2-TL screws and 161 C2-PD screws were placed in 167 patients. Thirty-one (19%) cases of axial cervical fusion (C1-C2 or C1-C3) were performed (mean age, 63.8 +/- 20.6 years) with either C2-TL (16 [52%]) or C2-PD (15 [48%]) screw fixation. One hundred thirty-six (81%) cases of subaxial cervical fusion (C2-caudal) were performed (mean age, 57.9 +/- 14.7 years) with either C2-TL (66 [49%]) or C2-PD (70 [51%]) screw fixation. For both axial and subaxial cervical fusions, baseline patient characteristics and all measures of perioperative morbidity were similar between C2-TL and C2-PD screw cohorts. In total, 11 (7%) PD screws breached the pedicle (0 requiring acute revision) versus only 2 (1.3%) TL screws that breached the C2 lamina (1 requiring acute revision) (P = 0.018). By 1 year postoperatively, pseudoarthrosis or screw pullout requiring reoperation was required in 4 (6.1%) patients with C2-TL screws versus 0 (0%) patients with PD screws (P < 0.05 for subaxial constructs). No cases of C2-TL or C2-PD axial fusion required reoperation or screw pullout or pseudoarthrosis., Conclusion: In our experience, radiographic breach of C2 pedicle screws occurred more frequently than C2 laminar screw breach. However, this was not associated with an increase in morbidity. By 12 months postoperatively, C2-TL screws were associated with a greater incidence of operative revision when used in subaxial constructs but similarly effective for axial cervical constructs. The 1-year durability of C2-TL screws might be inferior to C2 pedicle screws for subaxial fusions, but equally effective for axial cervical fusions.
- Published
- 2009
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