European spine journal : official publication of the European Spine Society, the European Spinal Deformity Society, and the European Section of the Cervical Spine Research Society
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Angiogenesis is essential in tissue growth and regeneration. There are several factors that are able to stimulate vascular endothelial cell growth, including platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Disc herniation tissue (DHT) contains vascular ingrowth, which promotes granulation tissue formation. ⋯ In all age groups it was higher than 80%. Thus capillaries in disc herniation tissue are evidently newly formed and our results demonstrate that PDGF and VEGF participate in the neovascularization process. The presence of PDGF in fibroblasts and in disc cells suggests that this growth factor regulates the function of these cells, possibly the proliferation of the cells and the production of extracellular matrix components.
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Multiple hereditary osteochondromatosis is a genetically transmitted disorder consisting of multiple projections of bone capped by cartilage, which are called exostoses. Spinal cord compression due to expansion of a laminar osteochondroma is rare but well recognized. Surgical decompression usually improves the patient's neurological status but, in cervical exostosis, post-laminectomy kyphosis and instability problems, especially in the high-risk adolescent group, form the most significant potential difficulties in the postoperative period. We report a case of cervical laminar exostosis that was treated by anterior stabilization and fusion and discuss the benefits of this technique.
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Case Reports
Brucellosis of the spine with a synchronous Staphylococcus aureus pyogenic elbow infection.
Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis and pyogenic arthritis has a different pattern in the elderly than in the young. The axial skeleton is the most frequent site of infection and treatment is usually by intravenous antibiotics. We report a case of Staph. aureus septic arthritis of the elbow with concomitant osteomyelitis of the spine that was thought to be due to Staph. aureus, but culture of debrided material from the lesion grew Brucella in culture. We suggest that in the elderly it is advisable to obtain a tissue culture diagnosis and not to instigate therapy based on positive blood cultures or a concomitant infection.
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Seventy-eight patients were treated with closed reduction and transpedicular fixation for 82 spine fractures. The fractures were localised in the lower third of the spine and were all, according to the Denis classification, considered unstable. Eighteen patients had neurological deficiencies. ⋯ The complication rate of the transpedicular fixation method used reported by other authors could not be confirmed in our material. Iatrogenic neurological damage was not observed. A partial loss in the correction of the traumatic kyphosis was observed after removal of the implant in 11 patients.
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The evaluation of continued pain after a technically successful posterolateral lumbar spine fusion is often challenging. Although the intervertebral disc is often a source of low back pain, abnormal endplates may also be a focus of pain, and possibly a source of continued pain after a posterolateral fusion. MRI allows noninvasive evaluation for disc degeneration, as well as for abnormal endplates and adjacent vertebral body marrow. ⋯ We conclude that posterolateral lumber fusion has a less predictable result for the subset of degenerative disc patients with abnormal endplates and associated marrow inflammation. More research is needed to determine the biological and biomechanical effects of posterolateral fusion upon the endplate within the fused segments. If indeed further study supports the hypothesis that abnormal endplates associated with inflammation are a source of pain, then treating the endplates directly by anterior fusion may be a preferred treatment for this subset of degenerative patients.