• J Spinal Disord Tech · May 2014

    Multicenter Study

    Sagittal rebalancing of the pelvis and the thoracic spine after pedicle subtraction osteotomy at the lumbar level.

    • Marc-Antoine Rousseau, Jean-Yves Lazennec, Jean-Louis Tassin, Didier Fort, and Groupe d’Etude la Scoliose [French Scoliosis Study Group].
    • *Service de Chirurgie Orthopédique et Traumatologique, Hôpital Pitié Salpétrière, Paris ‡Service de Chirurgie Orthopédique et Traumatologique, Hôpital Belle-Isle, Metz §Institut Regional Readaptation, Nancy ∥Groupe d'Etude de la Scoliose, Hôpital Saint-Joseph, Paris †Biomechanics Lab, Arts et Métiers Paris Tech, France.
    • J Spinal Disord Tech. 2014 May 1;27(3):166-73.

    DesignRetrospective study of radiologic records of patients who underwent lumbar pedicle subtraction osteotomy (PSO) procedures.ObjectiveTo evaluate the restoration of spinal balance above and below the osteotomy site after PSO for various causes.Summary Of Background DataThe normal sagittal balance of the spine has been widely documented. Sagittal imbalance can be surgically treated with vertebral osteotomy. Reports have described its technical aspects and local radiologic results. Less is known about the spontaneous rebalancing of the spine cranially and caudally to the osteotomy site.MethodsThe French Scoliosis Study Group conducted a multicenter retrospective study from the records of a combined cohort of 356 patients. Spinal balance after PSO was assessed radiologically. In this study, we focused specifically on measuring the reorientation of the pelvis and upper thoracic segments and investigated the influence of pelvic incidence, osteotomy level, and regional lordosis gain. The population was classified according to the indication for the procedure: posttraumatic deformity, degenerative kyphosis, scoliosis, or ankylosing spondylarthritis.ResultsThe average regional lordosis gain was 26.1 degrees. In the degenerative kyphosis and scoliosis groups, the level of osteotomy and the incidence angle tended to influence pelvic adaptation (better balance of the caudal portion was associated with low-level PSO and low-incidence angle). The posttraumatic deformity cases had a specific pattern: balance changes after PSO were limited to the local lordosis gain, with less pelvic and thoracic reorientation, probably due to spinal flexibility. On the contrary, the spondylarthritis cases showed less pelvic and more thoracic reorientation, probably due to hip and spinal stiffness.ConclusionsBetter knowledge from a large series of the overall spontaneous spinal balance after PSO and the pelvic/thoracic reorientation would be useful for preoperative planning of lumbar osteotomies and predicting pelvic and hip reorientation.Level Of EvidenceLevel II.

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