Surgical treatment of occipitocervical instability

Update Item Information
Publication Type Journal Article
School or College School of Medicine
Department Neurosurgery
Creator Dailey, Andrew T.
Other Author Finn, Michael A.; Bishop, Frank S.
Title Surgical treatment of occipitocervical instability
Date 2008
Description OBJECTIVE: Instability of the occipitocervical junction can be a challenging surgical problem because of the unique anatomic and biomechanical characteristics of this region. We review the causes of instability and the development of surgical techniques to stabilize the occipitocervical junction. METHODS: Occipitocervical instrumentation has advanced significantly, and modern modular screw-based constructs allow for rigid short-segment fixation of unstable elements while providing the stability needed to achieve successful fusion in nearly 100% of patients. This article reviews the preoperative planning, the variety of instrumentation and surgical strategies, as well as the postoperative care of these patients. RESULTS: Current constructs use occipital plates that are rigidly fixed to the thick midline keel of the occipital bone, polyaxial screws that can be placed in many different trajectories, and rods that are bent to approximate the acute occipitocervical angle. These modular constructs provide a variety of methods to achieve fixation in the atlantoaxial complex, including transarticular screws or C1 lateral mass screws in combination with C2 pars, C2 pedicle, or C2 translaminar trajectories. CONCLUSION: Surgical techniques for occipitocervical instrumentation and fusion are technically challenging and require meticulous preoperative planning and a thorough understanding of the regional anatomy, instrumentation, and constructs. Modern screw-based techniques for occipitocervical fusion have established clinical success and demonstrated biomechanical stability, with fusion rates approaching 100%.
Type Text
Publisher Wolters Kluwer (LWW)
Volume 63
Issue 5
First Page 961
Last Page 969
Subject Occipitocervical instability
Subject LCSH Bone screws (Orthopedics); Cervical vertebrae -- Surgery; Atlanto-occipital joint -- Surgery
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Finn, M. A., Bishop, F. S., & Dailey, A. T. (2008). Surgical treatment of occipitocervical instability. Neurosurgery, 63(5), 961-9.
Rights Management (c) Wolters Kluwer (LWW) http://lww.com
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 1,654,017 bytes
Identifier ir-main,13280
ARK ark:/87278/s6t731nf
Setname ir_uspace
ID 703621
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6t731nf
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