PDF Khatri OdontoidFractures
PDF Khatri OdontoidFractures
PDF Khatri OdontoidFractures
Cervical Trauma:
Geriatric Considerations
Vishal Khatri, MD
Division of Spine Surgery
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Cooper Bone and Joint Institute
Cooper University Health Care
• no disclosures
Outline
• The Aging Spine
• Osteoporosis Evaluation and Treatment
• Geriatric Odontoid Fractures
• Central Cord Syndrome
Outline
• The Aging Spine
• Osteoporosis Evaluation and Treatment
• Geriatric Odontoid Fractures
• Central Cord Syndrome
The Aging Spine
• Population > 65 years old was 43.1 million in 2012
increase to 83.7 million by 2050
Fragility Fractures
• Only 19% of patients received treatment for
osteoporosis after hip fracture surgery
…HOWEVER…
85+
• Retrospective study of patients > 65 w/type II odontoid
fracture from 3 level I trauma centers from 2003–2009
• Mean age 82
• 165 operative (mean f/u 851 days)
• 157 non-operative (mean f/u 648 days)
• Short-term and long-term mortality analysis
Short-term Analysis (30 day)
• Retrospective study of patients > 65 w/type II odontoid
fracture from 3 level I trauma centers from 2003–2009
• 165 operative (mean f/u 851 days)
• 157 non-operative (mean f/u 648 days)
Long-term Analysis
• Subgroup analysis of a prospective multicenter study of
elderly patients (≥65 yr) with type II odontoid fracture
• NDI & SF-36 collected at baseline, 6 & 12 months
• 58 patients treated non-op
• 8 died within 90 days
• 35 (70%) with bony/fibrous union
• 15 (30%) developed primary or secondary non-union
• 11 (22.0%) developed nonunion 7 requiring surgery
• 4/39 (10.3%) patients classified as having “successful union” required surgery due
to late fracture displacement
• All outcome measures demonstrated a significant
decline from preinjury baseline in BOTH union and non-
union groups
• no significant differences in outcomes in union and non-union groups
• However, 12-month outcomes for the non-union patients reflect the status of
the patient after delayed surgical treatment in the majority of these cases
• Mortality rate was 18% at 1 year
• 26% in non-surgical and 14% in surgical groups (p=0.05)
• NDI had increased (worsened) by 14.7 points in the nonsurgical
cohort (p < 0.0001)
• nonsignificant increase (worsening) of 5.7 points in the surgical group
(p = 0.0555).
• Surgical group had significantly better outcomes based on NDI and
SF-36 Bodily Pain dimension compared with the nonsurgical group
• no difference in the overall rate of complications,
• Lower non-union rate in surgical group (5% vs 21%, p=0.003)
Surgical Treatment Options
• Anterior (odontoid screw)
• Risks
• Loss of Fixation
• Hardware failure
• Hardware malpositioning
• Pseudoarthrosis
• Dysphagia
• Aspiration
Odontoid Fractures – Anterior Fixation
• Contraindications:
• Disruption of transverse ligament
• C2 body fracture
• Osteoporosis
• Pathologic fx
• Comminution
• Anterior-oblique fracture orientation
• C1-2 Arthrosis
• Chronic fracture
Odontoid Fractures – Anterior Fixation
• 1 vs 2 screw technique
• 96% stability using 2 screws
• 56% stability using 1 screw
• 35% had dysphagia
• 25% of patients required a feeding tube
• 19% had aspiration pneumonia requiring antibiotics
Odontoid Fx – Posterior Fixation
• Benefits:
• Increased stability
• Definitive treatment
• Less dysphagia
• Risks
• Pseudoarthrosis
• Hardware malposition
• Hardware failure
• Vertebral artery injury
• Harvest issues (for autograft)
Odontoid Fx – Posterior Fixation Techniques
• C1-2 transarticular screw