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The bone & joint journal · Apr 2014
Anomalous vertebral and posterior communicating arteries as a risk factor in instrumentation of the posterior cervical spine.
- K Nagahama, H Sudo, K Abumi, M Ito, M Takahata, S Hiratsuka, K Kuroki, and N Iwasaki.
- Hokkaido University Hospital, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, North-15, West-7, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-8638, Japan.
- Bone Joint J. 2014 Apr 1; 96-B (4): 535-40.
AbstractWe investigated the incidence of anomalies in the vertebral arteries and Circle of Willis with three-dimensional CT angiography in 55 consecutive patients who had undergone an instrumented posterior fusion of the cervical spine. We recorded any peri-operative and post-operative complications. The frequency of congenital anomalies was 30.9%, abnormal vertebral artery blood flow was 58.2% and vertebral artery dominance 40%. The posterior communicating artery was occluded on one side in 41.8% of patients and bilaterally in 38.2%. Variations in the vertebral arteries and Circle of Willis were not significantly related to the presence or absence of posterior communicating arteries. Importantly, 18.2% of patients showed characteristic variations in the Circle of Willis with unilateral vertebral artery stenosis or a dominant vertebral artery, indicating that injury may cause lethal complications. One patient had post-operative cerebellar symptoms due to intra-operative injury of the vertebral artery, and one underwent a different surgical procedure because of insufficient collateral circulation. Pre-operative assessment of the vertebral arteries and Circle of Willis is essential if a posterior spinal fusion with instrumentation is to be carried out safely.
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