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      Traumatic Posterior L4–L5 Fracture Dislocation of the Lumbar Spine: A Case Report

      case-report

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          Abstract

          Study Design Case report.

          Objective The diagnosis and surgical management of a patient with traumatic bilateral posterior dislocation of L4–L5 is presented with a thorough review of the existing literature.

          Summary of Background Data Traumatic dislocation of L4–L5 has been reported in the English literature in only five cases; of these, only two were retrolisthesis.

          Methods A 20-year-old patient was involved in a high-energy vehicular accident and presented with back pain and inability to ambulate. Neurological assessment showed motor strength grade 2/5 in the proximal lower-extremity muscle groups (L1–L3 myotomes) and 0/5 strength distally (L4–S1 myotomes); in addition, incontinence of sphincters was found. X-rays and computed tomography (CT) scan revealed a three-column ligamentous injury with posterior fracture-dislocation of the L4 vertebral body with complete posterior displacement of L4 to L5 vertebral body. The patient underwent posterior approach with reduction, transpedicular fixation, and posterolateral fusion with autologous bone graft.

          Results At 1-year follow-up, the patient had recovered muscular strength in proximal lower-extremities muscle groups, sphincter function had fully recovered, and he was able to ambulate with crutches. There was no recovery of distal extremity sensorimotor function. Plain radiograph and CT scan showed good alignment and progressive maturation of his fusion procedure.

          Conclusion Traumatic retrolisthesis of L4–L5 is a high-energy unstable fracture; reduction of the dislocation is challenging because of the heavy forces acting in the lower lumbar spine. Instrumented fusion restores alignment and maintains segmental stability.

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          Most cited references8

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          Traumatic dislocation of the lumbosacral junction diagnosis, anatomical classification and surgical strategy.

          Traumatic lumbosacral dislocation is a rare lesion often characterised by a fracture dislocation of L5-S1 articular facets associated with anterior L5 slipping. Because of its rarity, the surgical strategy of lumbosacral traumatic dislocation remains controversial. We report the most important series of traumatic lumbosacral dislocation. The cases of six men and five women are presented. We discuss the diagnosis and surgical treatment options regarding the different type of lesions. A moderate anterior slipping of L5 over S1 was present in eight cases. The lesion was a bilateral lumbosacral fracture dislocation in eight cases, a pure lateral dislocation in two cases and a unilateral rotatory dislocation in one case. Patients were multiple-trauma patients in eight cases. A radicular deficit was present in two cases. All patients were treated surgically with a posterior osteosynthesis and fusion. A circumferential fusion was made in six cases. In four cases, the anterior fusion was made during the posterior approach. The postoperative course was favorable in all the cases. One patient necessitated secondarily an iterative posterior lumbosacral fixation and anterior fibular bone graft because of a lumbosacral pseudarthrosis. Traumatic dislocation of the lumbosacral junction is a rare and severe spinal fracture which occurs in patients after high energy trauma and could be initially misdiagnosed. We devised a new classification based on anatomical lesions. Treatment is always surgical, requiring reduction, osteosynthesis, and fusion. In case of L5 anterior slipping, it is crucial to assess the L5S1 disc by MRI or surgical exploration for disc disruption. In such case, we recommend to perform circumferential fusion to prevent lumbosacral pseudarthrodesis.
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            Traumatic spondyloptosis of the thoracolumbar spine.

            Traumatic Grade V thoracolumbar spondylolisthesis, or traumatic spondyloptosis (severe translation injuries), are uncommon spinal injuries. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this article represents the first reported case series of these unique spinal lesions.
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              Complete traumatic anterior dislocation of the lumbosacral joint: a case report.

              A case report is presented. This report documents a case of complete traumatic anterior lumbosacral joint dislocation with the sacralization of L5. Traumatic anterior dislocation of the lumbosacral joint is a rare spondylolisthesis. The strategy for surgical treatment of traumatic dislocation of the lumbosacral joint remains controversial. A case of a 29-year-old man sustaining complete traumatic lumbosacral joint dislocation with the sacralization of L5 was treated successfully. Indirect radiologic signs such as bilateral multiple transverse process fractures were strongly suggestive of the diagnosis, which was further confirmed by 3-dimensional-computed tomography scan. This complete spondylolisthesis induced the instabilities of the entire soft tissues and caused severe cauda equina syndrome. The patient underwent an open reduction, decompression, and posterior fixation. Bilateral disrupted nerve roots were partly repaired simultaneously. The patient successfully underwent surgery. An anatomically aligned and preserved solid spinal fusion was obtained during a 17-month follow-up. The patient had neurologic improvement in hip extension and knee flexion, and also could walk with an ankle brace. Posterior instrumentation with the rod and screw system is considered a useful method for the management of complete traumatic anterior lumbosacral joint dislocation. However, prognosis is correlated with the initial neurologic status and the severity of other associated injuries.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Global Spine J
                Global Spine J
                Global Spine Journal
                Georg Thieme Verlag KG (Stuttgart · New York )
                2192-5682
                2192-5690
                19 November 2012
                December 2012
                : 2
                : 4
                : 235-238
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Spine Surgery, Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitacion, México Distrito Federal, Mexico
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence and reprint requests Baron Zarate-Kalfopulos, MD Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitación—Spine Surgery Calzada Mexico Xochimilco 289 Col. Arenal de Guadalupe Delegación Tlalpan, México Distrito Federal 14389Mexico baronzk@ 123456hotmail.com
                Article
                120017
                10.1055/s-0032-1329889
                3864497
                24353974
                00593e0d-c8f4-43b5-94d3-7f5a34efc694
                © Thieme Medical Publishers
                History
                : 03 February 2012
                : 16 May 2012
                Categories
                Article

                thoracolumbar trauma,traumatic retrolisthesis,fracture-dislocation

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