AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed the accuracy of iliac screws placed using a freehand technique by the same surgeon, focusing on how screw breaches correlated with clinical symptoms leading to revision surgeries.
  • Out of 193 iliac screws examined, 169 were correctly placed, while 24 were misplaced, with breaches classified based on the severity of screw extrusion and their violation of iliac walls.
  • Only 12.4% of screws experienced breaches, with 2.1% being symptomatic enough to require revision surgery; breaches longer than 2 cm, especially in the lateral or inferior walls, posed significant risks.

Article Abstract

Objective: To analyze the accuracy of iliac screws using freehand technique performed by the same surgeon. We also analyzed how the breach of iliac screws was related to the clinical symptoms resulting in revision surgery.

Methods: From January 2009 to November 2015, 100 patients (193 iliac screws) were analyzed using postoperative computed tomography scans. The breaches were classified based on the superior, inferior, lateral, and medial iliac wall violation by the screw. According to the length of screw extrusion, the classification grades were as follows : grade 1, screw extrusion <1 cm; grade II, 1 cm ≤ screw extrusion <2 cm; grade III, 2 cm ≤ screw extrusion <3 cm; and grade IV, 3 cm ≤ screw extrusion. We also reviewed the revision surgery associated with iliac screw misplacement.

Results: Of the 193 inserted screws, 169 were correctly located and 24 were misplaced screws. There were eight grade I, six grade II, six grade III, and four grade IV screw breaches, and 11, 8, 2, and 3 screws violated the medial, lateral, superior, and inferior walls, respectively. Four revision surgeries were performed for the grade III or IV iliac screw breaches in the lateral or inferior direction with respect to its related symptoms.

Conclusion: In iliac screw placement, 12.4% breaches developed. Although most breaches were not problematic, symptomatic violations (2.1%) could result in revision surgery. Notably, the surgeon should keep in mind that lateral or inferior wall breaches longer than 2 cm can be risky and should be avoided.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7054120PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3340/jkns.2019.0090DOI Listing

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