ERKEN BAŞLANGIÇLI SKOLYOZ HASTALARI İLE ADÖLESAN İDİOPATİK SKOLYOZ HASTALARININ EŞLEŞTİRİLMİŞ GRUPLARDA POSTERİOR ENSTRÜMANTASYON VE FÜZYON AMELİYATI SONUÇLARININ KARŞILAŞTIRILMASI
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Date
2024Author
Dursun, Gökay
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DURSUN G. Comparison of Graduation Results of Early Onset Scoliosis Patients
and Posterior Instrumentation and Fusion Results of Adolescent Idiopathic
Scoliosis Patients Between Paired Groups. Hacettepe University Faculty of
Medicine, Orthopedics and Traumatology Specialization Thesis, Ankara 2024.
Early-onset scoliosis (EOS) is a progressive, life-threatening condition that needs to
be treated carefully. Treatment with growing rods (GR) is the most frequently
preferred method, and is usually followed by posterior instrumentation and fusion
(PIF), which is also called graduation. Graduation surgery is technically demanding
and complicated, leading to a preference for avoiding definitive fusion when there's
adequate improvement in scoliosis angle, no implant failure, and no need to change
instrumentation level. To compare the risks and benefits of instrumented posterior
fusion between patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) treated with
standard PIF, and patients with idiopathic EOS treated with GR and graduated with
PIF. This is a retrospective study. The study included patients with idiopathic etiology
EOS who underwent dual-GR and definitive surgery, as well as those who underwent
standard PIF with AIS diagnosis during the study period. The AIS and the EOS groups
were matched in terms of coronal deformity (scoliosis angle), sagittal deformity (T2-
T12 kyphosis, L1-S1 lordosis), gender, and age variables by Propensity Score
Matching analysis (Method nearest 1:3). Seven hundreds seventy-six patients (24
EOS, 752 AIS) were included in the study. Seventy-two AIS patients were matched
against 24 EOS patients. Significant differences were found between the groups in
terms of scoliosis correction percentage, surgery time, transfusion need, and number
of instrumented segments. The percentage of T1-T12 increase, percentage of T1-S1
increase, instrumented spinal segment length increase, and the estimated of blood loss
(EBL) were similar. Complications were seen in five patients (20.8%) in the EOS
group. One patient experienced intraoperative neuromonitoring alerts, which resolved
with appropriate intervention. One superior mesenteric artery syndrome, two proximal
anchor loosening and one superficial infection were recorded. Five patients (6.8%) in
the AIS group had complications (two screw malposition, one shoulder imbalance, one
trunk shift, one adding-on) and required revision surgery. Although the EOS group
had longer surgical time, more bleeding, and less correction of the coronal deformity,
trunk height gained by definitive surgery was the same as the AIS group. There is a
difference in favor of AIS between the groups in terms of coronal deformity correction
rates, but the final scoliosis angle of EOS patients is clinically satisfactory [(22.17
±13.07°)]. In conclusion, definitive fusion in EOS with idiopathic etiology does not
carry an excessive risk for complications, and the gains obtained by the patients at the
end of surgery are remarkable.