PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Butt, Mohammad F. AU - Dhar, Shabir A. AU - Farooq, Munir AU - Hussain, Anwar AU - Mir, Bashir A. AU - Halwai, Manzoor A. AU - Zargar, Haroon R. AU - Wani, Zaid A. TI - Neurological outcome following delayed fixation of unstable thoracolumbar spinal injuries with short segment posterior fixation DP - 2008 Jan 01 TA - Neurosciences Journal PG - 65--69 VI - 13 IP - 1 4099 - http://nsj.org.sa/content/13/1/65.short 4100 - http://nsj.org.sa/content/13/1/65.full SO - Neurosciences (Riyadh)2008 Jan 01; 13 AB - OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the improvement in neurological deficit following late decompression and stabilization of the fractured thoracolumbar spine.METHODS: Between January 2001 and August 2004 neurological recovery in 120 thoracolumbar fractures was studied after posterior stabilization at the Hospital for Bone & Joint Surgery, Srinagar, India. There were 88 male and 32 female patients. Fall from a height, usually a tree, was the most common (90%) cause of injury. Seventy-six patients (63%) had neurologic deficit at the time of presentation. The unstable spine was fixed, between 4-18 days after trauma, by posterior short segment instrumentation (Steffee). Neurological recovery for the patients was recorded in the follow-up period. Frankel grade was used to assess the neurological status. The average follow-up period was 25 months (range 8-44 months), and average age was 34 years (18-54).RESULTS: There were 40 patients (30%) with an incomplete neurological deficit, namely, patients with Frankel grade B, C, and D. Two grades of improvement were found in 8 patients, and one grade improvement in 32 patients with incomplete lesion. Only one third of the patients with complete neuro deficit improved at the final follow-up. The overall result of the surgery for partial lesions was an improvement of at least one Frankel grade in all cases, but no improvement in most of the cases with complete lesion.CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates a clear relationship between the level of injury and Frankel grades, translational injuries are associated with a more severe neurologic grade, and surgical intervention appears to improve the neurological outcome, even when the intervention is inadvertently delayed (average 7.9 days).