• Spine · Jul 2023

    Radiological Features of Atlas Occipitalization and Its Clinical Implications.

    • Jun Yan, Cheng Qiu, Lingling Fu, Xinyu Liu, and Yanping Zheng.
    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Qilu Hospital, Shandong University, Wenhuaxi Road, Jinan, Shandong, P. R. China.
    • Spine. 2023 Jul 1; 48 (13): 962968962-968.

    Study DesignRetrospective radiographic analysis.ObjectivesEvaluation of the anatomic features of the craniovertebral junction in patients with occipitalization with and without atlantoaxial dislocation (AAD).Summary Of Background DataAtlas occipitalization is a common feature of congenital AAD and usually requires surgical intervention. However, not all instances of occipitalization necessarily lead to AAD. No study has specifically examined and compared the craniovertebral bony morphology in occipitalization with, and without, AAD.Materials And MethodWe reviewed computed tomography (CT) scans of 2500 adult outpatients. Occipitalization cases without AAD (ON) were selected. Meanwhile, a series of 20 inpatient occipitalization cases with AAD (OD) were obtained in parallel. Another 20 control cases without occipitalization were also included. Multi-directional reconstructed CT images of all cases were analyzed.ResultsA total of 18 adults with ON were found in all 2500 outpatients (0.7%). Both anterior height and posterior height of C1 lateral mass in the control group were significantly larger than those in both the ON and OD groups, whereas posterior height in the OD group was significantly less than that in the ON group. Three morphologic types of the occipitalized atlas posterior arch were identified: Type I, bilateral sides were unfused with opisthion; Type II, unilateral side was unfused with opisthion, whereas the other side was fused; and Type III, bilateral sides were fused with opisthion. In the ON group, three cases were type I (17%), six cases were type II (33%), and nine cases were type III (50%). In the OD group, all 20 cases were type III (100%).ConclusionsAtlas occipitalization with, and without, AAD results from a distinctly different bony morphology at the craniovertebral junction. The novel classification system based on reconstructed CT images may be useful in prognosticating AAD in the setting of atlas occipitalization.Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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