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Long-term clinical and radiographic results of Cotrel-Dubousset instrumentation of right thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.

Authors :
Boos N
Dolan LA
Weinstein SL
Source :
The Iowa orthopaedic journal [Iowa Orthop J] 2007; Vol. 27, pp. 40-6.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Little substantive data is available in the literature on the long-term clinical and radiological results of Cotrel-Dubousset instrumentation (CDI) for the treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. We therefore retrospectively investigated the long-term clinical and radiographic outcome of patients who underwent (CDI) for right thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. 54 consecutive patients (45 females, 9 males) who underwent CDI for right thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis with an average age of 14 years (range 10-21 years) at surgery were included in this series. There were 18 King Type II, 19 Type III, 5 Type IV, 3 Type V and 9 double major curves. The average coronal Cobb angle of the primary thoracic curve preoperatively, postoperatively and at latest follow-up was 55 degrees, 17 degrees and 22 degrees, respectively. The lumbar curve (secondary and double major) averaged 40 degrees, 21 degrees and 23 degrees, respectively. Coronal balance (deviation from the central sacral line) was slightly improved from 13 mm to 11 mm. The average shoulder elevation increased from 3 degrees to 5 degrees, presumably as a result of the rod derotation maneuver. Thoracic kyphosis (20 degrees to 22 degrees) and lumbar lordosis (49 degrees to 54 degrees) was preserved or even improved by the instrumentation. All patients were doing well and had no complaints with regard to a substantial limitation of professional or sports activity. There were no apparent non-unions, infections or neurological complications. CDI of adolescent right thoracic idiopathic scoliosis provides encouraging clinical and radiographic results at an average follow-up of 9 years (2 to 16 years). Overall patient satisfaction, functional status and subjective cosmetic improvement is high.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1541-5457
Volume :
27
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Iowa orthopaedic journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17907428