The Association Between Clival Axial Angle and Distal Junctional Failure After Craniocervical Fusion.

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Tác giả: Ethan D L Brown, Shashank V Gandhi, Ahmad Latefi, Sheng-Fu Larry Lo, Zach Pennington, Harold Rekate, Daniel Schneider, Daniel M Sciubba, Max Ward, Timothy G White, Jeffrey Zimering

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 286.136 *American Baptist Association

Thông tin xuất bản: England : Global spine journal , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 469646

 STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective Cohort. OBJECTIVES: Craniovertebral instability can arise from various congenital or acquired conditions, but definitive management often requires craniocervical fusion. This study evaluates whether postoperative clivo-axial angle (CXA) can predict distal junctional failure in patients undergoing craniocervical fusion. While postoperative alignment of the head and cervical spine can be quantified via the CXA, it is unclear whether the CXA can predict distal junctional failure. METHODS: All patients undergoing craniocervical decompression and fusion (CCF) for craniovertebral instability between 2012 and 2023 at a single institution were identified. Patients experiencing adjacent segment disease (ASD) were identified and compared to those without said pathology based on CXA, Grabb-Oakes line (pBC2), and the presence of cervical kyphosis, cervical disc degeneration, or subluxation on pre- and postoperative imaging. Statistical analysis included Shapiro-Wilk tests for normality, followed by independent t-tests or Mann-Whitney U tests with FDR adjusted RESULTS: 71 patients were included, of whom ten (14.3%) developed distal junctional kyphosis and 3 (4.3%) developed cervical spondylolisthesis. The median postoperative CXA was significantly lower in non-ASD patients (144° [IQR: 140-148°] vs 158° [IQR: 153-162°]
  CONCLUSIONS: We found craniocervical alignment, as assessed by CXA, independently predicted distal junctional disease in patients undergoing craniocervical fusion, possibly due to low preoperative CXA in these patients. Large increases in CXA may contribute to postoperative instrumentation failure.
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