Surgical management of acute traumatic spinal cord injury : Stability vs. functionality

Traumatic spinal cord injuries represent a devastating condition in the lives of those affected, with physical, emotional, and economic burdens for the patients themselves, their social environment, and society as a whole. Surgical approach and techniques in traumatic spinal cord injuries. Traumatic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Unfallchirurgie (Heidelberg, Germany) Germany), 2023-10, Vol.126 (10), p.756-763
Hauptverfasser: Klockner, Friederike, Roch, Jonathan, Jäckle, Katharina, Driesen, Tobias, Meier, Marc-Pascal, Reinhold, Maximilian, Lehmann, Wolfgang, Weiser, Lukas
Format: Artikel
Sprache:ger
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Zusammenfassung:Traumatic spinal cord injuries represent a devastating condition in the lives of those affected, with physical, emotional, and economic burdens for the patients themselves, their social environment, and society as a whole. Surgical approach and techniques in traumatic spinal cord injuries. Traumatic spinal cord injuries should be surgically treated as soon as possible, but at least within 24 h of injury. If accompanying dural injuries occur, suturing or applying a patch is the primary method of choice. Early surgical decompression is essential, particularly in cervical spinal cord injuries. Stabilization in terms of instrumentation or fusion is inevitable and should be carried out over short segments to maintain the functionality of the cervical spine. Long-distance dorsal instrumentation with prior reduction in thoracolumbar spinal cord injuries provides high stability and preserved functionality in patients. Injuries to the thoracolumbar junction often require a two-stage anterior treatment. Early surgical decompression, reduction, and stabilization of traumatic spinal cord injuries within 24 h are recommended. While short-segment stabilization is recommended in the cervical spine in addition to decompression, instrumentation should be over long segments in the thoracolumbar spine to provide the necessary stability while maintaining functionality.
ISSN:2731-703X
DOI:10.1007/s00113-023-01341-w