Spine Surgery and Related Research
Online ISSN : 2432-261X
ISSN-L : 2432-261X

This article has now been updated. Please use the final version.

Bony Healing of Discontinuous Laminar Stress Fractures due to Contralateral Pars Defect or Spina Bifida Occulta
Toshinori SakaiTsuyoshi GotoKosuke SugiuraHiroaki ManabeFumitake TezukaKazuta YamashitaYoichiro TakataTakashi ChikawaKoichi Sairyo
Author information
JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS Advance online publication

Article ID: 2018-0012

Details
Abstract

Introduction. Although there has been a dramatic improvement in the outcomes of conservative treatment to achieve bony healing due to advances in diagnostic and therapeutic tools, in some patients, the results continue to be unfavorable. The purpose of this study was to investigate the outcomes of conservative treatment in pediatric patients with stress fractures occurring in the lamina that are discontinuous due to a contralateral pars defect or spina bifida occulta (SBO).

Methods. The medical records at our outpatient clinic for 103 consecutive patients (83 boys, 20 girls) with lumbar spondylolysis (LS) were reviewed to identify those who had presented with a stress fracture and a contralateral pars defect or with SBO at the affected lamina level.

Results. Twelve patients (11 boys, 1 girl) of mean age 12.3 (range 8–16) years were identified. Except for1 stress structure that occurred at L4, all the stress fractures occurred at L5. Six patients had a pars defect, 5 had SBO, and 1 had both. Two of the 6 patients with a contralateral pars defect had early LS, 3 had progressive LS, and 1 had a pedicle fracture. The fracture healed in1 (50%) of the 2 patients with early LS and in the patient with the pedicle fracture, but did not heal in any of the patients with progressive LS. Two of the 5 patients with SBO at the affected lamina level had early LS and 3 had progressive LS. The bony healing rate was 100% in the 2 patients with early LS and 66.7% in the 3 patients with progressive LS. The fracture healed in the patient with progressive LS and both a pars defect and SBO at the affected lamina.

Conclusion Contralateral pars defect remains an unfavorable factor for bony healing discontinuous laminar stress fractures.

Content from these authors
© 2018 The Japanese Society for Spine Surgery and Related Research.

SSRR is an Open Access journal distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Anyone may download, reuse, copy, reprint, or distribute articles published in the journal for not-for-profit purposes if they cite the original authors and source properly. If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you may not distribute the modified material.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
feedback
Top