One-stage anterior interbody autografting and instrumentation in primary surgical management of thoracolumbar spinal tuberculosis

There are few articles in the literature concerning anterior instrumentation in the surgical management of spinal tuberculosis in the exudative stage. So we report here 23 cases of active thoracolumbar spinal tuberculosis treated by one-stage anterior interbody autografting and instrumentation to verify the importance of early reconstruction of spinal stability and to evaluate the results of one-stage interbody autografting and anterior instrumentation in the surgical management of the exudative stage of throracolumbar spinal tuberculosis. Twenty-three patients, including two children (9 and 15 years old, respectively) and 21 adults with thoracolumbar spinal tuberculosis were treated surgically. T9 to L4 spinal segments were affected, and MRI/CT showed evident collapse of the vertebrae because of tuberculous destruction and paravertebral abscess. Neurological deficits were found in 15 patients. Before surgery, patients received standard anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy for 2 to 3 weeks. Under general endotracheal anaesthesia, the patients were placed in right recumbent positions, and a transthoracic, lateral extracavitary or extrapleural approach was chosen according to the tuberculosis lesion segment. After exposure, the tuberculous lesion region, including the collapsed vertebrae and in-between intervertebral disc, was almost completely resected in order to release the segmental spinal cord. Then, autologous iliac, rib or fibular graft was harvested to complete interbody fusion, and an anterior titanium-alloy plate-screw system was used to reconstruct the stability of the affected segments. Anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy was continued for at least 9 months, and the patients were supported with thoracolumbosacral orthosis for 6 months after surgery. All patients were followed up for an average of 2 years. All 23 cases were healed without chronic sinus formation or any recurrence of tuberculosis during the follow-up period. Spinal fusion occurred at a mean of 3.8 months after surgery. Of all patients with neurological deficits, 14 patients showed obvious improvement; only one patient with Frankel C lesion remained unchanged, but none of the patients got worse. During the follow-up period, a mean of 18 degrees of kyphosis correction was achieved after surgery in the adult group. Moderate progressive kyphosis because of this procedure fusion occurred postoperatively in a 9-year-old child after 2 1/2 years; another 15-year-old child did not demonstrate this phenomenon. Except for the early loosening of one screw in two cases (which did not affect the reconstruction of spinal stability), no other complications associated with this procedure were found during follow-up. Early reconstruction of spinal stability plays an important role in the surgical management of spinal tuberculosis. One-stage anterior interbody autografting and instrumentation in the surgical management of the exudative stage of spinal tuberculosis show more advantages in selected patients, but supplementary posterior fusion should be considered to prevent postoperative kyphosis when this procedure is performed in children.

[1]  H. Kemp,et al.  Anterior fusion of the spine for infective lesions in adults. , 1973, The Journal of bone and joint surgery. British volume.

[2]  A. Hodgson,et al.  Anterior Spine Fusion for the Treatment of Tuberculosis of the Spine , 1960 .

[3]  O. Boachie-Adjei,et al.  Tuberculosis of the spine. , 1974, British medical journal.

[4]  Y. Sugioka,et al.  Evaluation of the risk of instrumentation as a foreign body in spinal tuberculosis. Clinical and biologic study. , 1993, Spine.

[5]  A. Alter Progressive kyphosis following solid anterior spine fusion in children with tuberculosis of the spine , 1976 .

[6]  A controlled trial of anterior spinal fusion and débridement in the surgical management of tuberculosis of the spine in patients on standard chemotherapy: a study in Hong Kong , 1974, The British journal of surgery.

[7]  K. Ha,et al.  Posterior Instrumentation and Anterior Interbody Fusion for Tuberculous Kyphosis of Dorsal and Lumbar Spines , 1995, Spine.

[8]  M. Moon,et al.  Tuberculosis of the spine. Controversies and a new challenge. , 1997, Spine.

[9]  O. Güven,et al.  A Single Stage Posterior Approach and Rigid Fixation for Preventing Kyphosis in the Treatment of Spinal Tuberculosis , 1994, Spine.

[10]  A. Hodgson,et al.  Tuberculosis of the Spine in Children , 2001 .

[11]  K. Lu,et al.  Transpedicular instrumentation as an adjunct in the treatment of thoracolumbar and lumbar spine tuberculosis with early stage bone destruction. , 1999, Journal of neurosurgery.

[12]  H. Mankin,et al.  Tuberculosis of bone and joints: the Red King lives! , 2001 .

[13]  D. Altman,et al.  Anterior and Posterior Fusion for Children With Tuberculosis of the Spine , 1996, Clinical orthopaedics and related research.