AI Article Synopsis

  • - The report reviews literature on the postoperative correction of rib hump (RH) following spinal surgery for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS), emphasizing the importance of clinical monitoring over initial radiographic results in younger children with rib asymmetry, even if they are not scoliotic.
  • - It stresses the significance of using the rib index (RI) derived from spinal radiographs to select the optimal rib level for costoplasty, which is the surgical approach to correct RH, reflecting the necessity for better planning in surgeries.
  • - Findings indicate that while spinal surgery improves curvature, RH correction is often insufficient and may worsen over time, particularly in younger patients, due to the primary cause of RH being rib asymmetry rather than spinal rotation; thus

Article Abstract

The aim of this report is to review the literature dealing with the postoperative correction of rib hump (RH) after spinal operations for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) and its aetiological implications of hump postoperative fate for IS. Recommendations related to RH deformity for the follow-up of younger asymmetric but not scoliotic children are provided, and the concept that clinical monitoring of the chest deformity is more important than merely an initially negative radiographic examination (curve less than 10°) is underlined. Additionally, guidelines are provided based on the segments T1-T12 rib index (RI) in the existing lateral preoperative radiographs for the optimal selection of the rib level for a successfully costoplasty. This review is based on the collected articles that used either the RI method, derived from the double rib contour sign (DRCS) at the lateral spinal radiographs, or alternative methods for the assessment of the RH deformity and presented the results of the operative treatment of the scoliotic spine on RH. A total of 19 relevant articles published from 1976 to 2022 were found in PubMed. Findings: All the above articles show that not only is the hump incompletely corrected, but it recurs and worsens during the follow-up and even more intensively in skeletally immature operated scoliosis children. Conclusions and Future Directions: Surgery straightens the spine, yet the RH is corrected approximately only as much as the spinal derotation. The only way to correct the RH more is with costoplasty, which, however, is not performed in most cases for many reasons. The key reason for this phenomenon is the fact that the RH deformity (RHD) is mainly due to the asymmetric development of the ribs and much less so due to the rotation of the vertebrae in the thoracic spine. Surgery on the spine cannot limit the asymmetry of the ribs or stop the mechanism that causes their asymmetrical growth. The results presented in all the reviewed articles support the important protagonistic role of RHD on scoliogenesis, which precedes the subsequent formed spinal deformity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10605549PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children10101697DOI Listing

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