Surgical treatment of thoracolumbar spinal tuberculosis—a multicentre, retrospective, case-control study
Yong Tang, Wenjie Wu, Sen Yang, Donggui Wang, Qiang Zhang, Xun Liu, Tianyong Hou, Fei Luo, et al. (10 authors)
Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research · 2019-07
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this multicentre, retrospective study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of different surgical approaches for treating thoracolumbar tuberculosis. METHODS: This study reviewed 132 patients with thoracolumbar tuberculosis in six institutions between January 1999 and January 2015 surgically treated by an anterior-only approach (n = 22, group A), an anterior combined with posterior approach (n = 79, group B), and a posterior-only approach (n = 31, group C). All patients were treated with standard antituberculosis drugs pre- and postoperatively and were followed regularly after surgery. Clinical symptoms, nerve function, and the erythrocyte sedimentation rate were observed, and kyphosis correction and bone fusion were evaluated by X-ray or computed tomography. RESULTS: At the last follow-up, all patients had achieved bone fusion, relief from pain, and neurological recovery. The Cobb angle was improved; however, the Cobb angle showed a degree of loss at the final follow-up after all three surgical approaches. Further comparisons revealed a difference in angle loss at the final follow-up among the three groups; groups B and C were superior to group A in maintenance of the correction. The posterior-only approach was characterized by a shorter operative time and reduced blood loss. CONCLUSIONS: Surgery by a posterior-only approach is superior to that by an anterior-only approach and anterior combined with posterior approach in terms of permanent kyphosis correction and spinal stability maintenance. Therefore, we recommend surgery by a posterior-only approach as the optimized treatment for thoracolumbar tuberculosis if the indications for this treatment are met.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Orthopedic surgery
- Retrospective cohort study
- Tuberculosis
- Spinal surgery
- Surgery
- Thoracic vertebrae
- General surgery
- Lumbar vertebrae