Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVE: A vertebral compression fracture (VCF) can be found in trauma, osteoporosis, and tumor pathology. The most frequent is the pathological fracture in osteoporotic vertebrae in the elderly. Percutaneous techniques of vertebral cementation allow treatment of A1-A2 AO spine fractures, improving pain control and spine stabilization and decreasing mobility and mortality. Traditionally, the selection of patients is fundamental for spine surgery success, with an absolute contraindication being posterior wall involvement (A3-A4 AO spine fractures) or VCF with a loss of height greater than 50%. In this report, we present a variant surgical technique combining percutaneous spine surgery with cementoplasty for patients with classical spine surgery contraindications. METHODS: Five patients with complex symptomatic VCF or A3-A4 AO spine fractures in pathologic bone with MRI short tau inversion recovery (STIR) sequence (+) were operated on with a combined technique (percutaneous kyphoplasty (KP) and vesselplasty). The visual analog scale (VAS) was used to measure postoperative pain. RESULTS: The procedure was performed within 60 days of the fracture in all patients. The mean hospital stay was two days. No patient developed major complications. All the patients had a satisfactory clinical (improvement in pain control) and radiological response at the perioperative period and at a 30-day follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: The combined percutaneous technique allows surgical resolution of cases previously considered contraindicated, especially in elderly patients and those with comorbidities, without involving higher cost, complications, surgical time, and hospital stay. We suggest a novel, safe, and effective variation of the vertebral cementoplasty technique.