Popis: |
Background: Type II C2 odontoid fractures are common traumatic cervical spine lesions and have the highest risk of non-union without fusion. Pseudoarthrosis may lead to extreme anatomic deformation, and poor clinical outcomes. A 50-year-old male, following a traumatic C2 dens fracture treated when the patient was 44 years of age, newly presented at age 50 with pseudoarthrosis and severe C1-C2 subluxation that required a secondary fusion using a three-dimensional (3D) printed model for appropriate surgical planning. Case Description: A 44-year-old male underwent a C1 posterior arch osteotomy to treat cervical myelopathy after a type 2 odontoid fracture. Now at age 50, he newly presented with recurrent myelopathy, and marked cord compression due to a C2 odontoid-dens pseudoarthrosis, and extreme C1 subluxation over C2. A 3D model of the patients’ cervical-spine anatomy was created for surgical planning and led to an anterior C1-C2 freeing of the pseudoarthrosis, followed by a posterior C0-C1 decompression, deformity reduction, C0, C2 laminar, and C3/4 trans-articular arthrodesis. Six months postoperatively, the patient improved from a pre-operative mJOA score of 5 to a postoperative mJOA score of 14. Conclusion: A 3D model was successfully utilized to plan a secondary 360° fusion for a pseudoarthrosis diagnosed 6 years after an original C-C2type II odontoid fusion in a now 50-year-old male. |