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E-raamat: Revision Spine Surgery: Pearls and Pitfalls

Edited by (Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA), Edited by (Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA), Edited by (Weill Cornell Brain and Spine Center, New York, NY, USA)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Aug-2019
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781498773836
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Aug-2019
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781498773836

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Revision spine surgery requires a unique skill set different from performing a primary operation. Understanding when a simple revision is sufficient, when a more complex approach is needed, or when a non-surgical option should be considered is critical to good patient care and outcomes. In this first book to focus exclusively on the complex topic of revision spine surgery, world-renowned Dr. Alex Vaccaro and leading neuro and orthopaedic spine surgeons, navigate physicians through the initial evaluative process and the potential pitfalls and complications encountered in revision surgery.

Video list xi
Contributors xiii
GENERAL
1(38)
1 The approach to revision procedures
3(10)
Joseph A. Weiner
Wellington K. Hsu
2 How to dissect the plane between the scar of a laminectomy defect in the posterior cervical spine
13(6)
Ken Ishii
3 How to dissect the plane between the scar of a laminectomy defect in the posterior thoracic and lumbar spine
19(8)
Nickul S. Jain
Raymond J. Hah
4 Local muscle flaps in the setting of revision spine surgery: Indications, operative planning, principles, and postoperative management
27(8)
Briar L. Dent
Jaime L. Bernstein
Jason A. Spector
5 Revision and reimplantation of a spinal cord stimulator device
35(4)
Fadi Al-Saiegh
John M. DePasse
Francis J. Sirch
Gregory D. Schroeder
Chengyuan Wu
PART 1 ANTERIOR CERVICAL
39(26)
6 Revision ACDF at the same level
41(6)
Fadi Al-Saiegh
George M. Ghobrial
James S. Harrop
7 Revision ACDF: Adjacent level
47(4)
Courtney Pendleton
Matthew S. Galetta
Jack Jallo
8 Converting a total disc replacement to an ACDF
51(8)
Joseph D. Smucker
Rick C. Sasso
9 Treatment of adjacent segment disease after total disc replacement (TDR)
59(6)
Bruce V. Darden
PART 2 POSTERIOR CERVICAL
65(50)
10 Revision suboccipital decompression for complex Chiari malformation
67(10)
Jacob L. Goldberg
Ibrahim Hussain
Ali A. Baa]
Jeffrey P. Greenfield
11 How to revise a failed occipital cervical fusion
77(6)
Joshua T. Wewel
Mazda K. Turel
Joseph E. Molenda
Vincent C. Traynelis
12 How to revise a failed C1--C2 fusion
83(6)
Nizar Moayeri
Michael G. Fehlings
13 Treatment of postlaminectomy kyphosis
89(12)
Christopher T. Martin
John M. Rhee
14 Revision of failed posterior cervical fusions
101(8)
Trevor Mordhorst
Vadim Goz
William Ryan Spiker
15 Complications necessitating surgical intervention following cervical laminoplasty
109(6)
Michael J. Moses
Amos Z. Dai
Themistocles S. Protopsaltis
PART 3 THORACIC/THORACOLUMBAR SPINE
115(34)
16 Revision surgery for proximal junctional kyphosis following thoracolumbar fusion
117(10)
Sundeep S. Saini
Daniel Cataldo
Christopher R. Cook
Hamadi Murphy
Paul W. Millhouse
Kris Radcliff
17 Pedicle subtraction osteotomy (PSO) nonunion revision
127(6)
Jason W. Savage
18 Treatment of a nonunion of a thoracolumbar deformity, not at the site of a three-column osteotomy
133(12)
Randall B. Graham
Tyler R. Koski
Patrick A. Sugrue
19 How to safely remove a pedicle screw abutting the aorta
145(4)
Kevin Savage
Paul W. Millhouse
Hamadi Murphy
Gregory D. Schroeder
Alexander R. Vaccaro
PART 4 LUMBAR SPINE
149(80)
20 Revision of an anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF) nonunion
151(4)
Edward Delsole
Rishi Sharma
Gregory D. Schroeder
21 How to revise nonunion of a lateral lambar interbody fusion (LLIF) through a lateral approach
155(6)
Heeren S. Makanji
Jacqueline Koomson
Dhruv K.C. Goyal
Gregory D. Schroeder
22 How to surgically manage a recurrent lumbar herniated nucleus pulposus (HNP)
161(6)
Taylor Paziuk
Matthew S. Galetta
Jeffrey A. Rihn
23 How to perform revision lumbar decompression
167(6)
Jacob Hoffman
Ryan Murphy
Mark L. Prasarn
Shah-Nawaz M. Dodwad
24 How to perform revision lumbar decompression at the index level through a minimally invasive (MIS) approach
173(10)
Aaron Hillis
Christoph Wipplinger
Sertac Kirnaz
Franziska A. Schmidt
Roger Hartl
25 How to revise a transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF) nonunion with recurrent stenosis at the index level (open)
183(8)
Jesse E. Bible
Gregory Pace
26 How to revise a minimally invasive transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (MIS TLIF) nonunion with recurrent stenosis at the index level through an MIS approach
191(8)
Fady Y. Hijji
Ankur S. Narain
Gregory D. Lopez
Krishna T.
Kudaravalli
Kelly H. Yom
Kern Singh
27 How to revise a posterior lateral decompression and fusion at the index level
199(6)
Fadi Sweiss
Cristian Gragnaniello
Anthony J. Caputy
Michael Rosner
28 How to revise a posterior lumbar fusion that has developed adjacent-level stenosis with or without instability
205(6)
Patrick Curry
Mark F. Kurd
29 Flat back deformity revision surgery
211(6)
Jefferson Wilson
Matthew S. Galetta
Srinivas Prasad
30 Revision high-grade spondylolisthesis surgery
217(6)
Peter D. Angevine
31 Management of a ventrally displaced graft following ALIF, TLIF or DLIF
223(6)
Dhruv K.C. Goyal
Heeren S. Makanji
Gregory D. Schroeder
Brian W. Su
PART 5 SPECIAL CASES
229(32)
32 Treatment of symptomatic cervical and lumbar pseudomeningocoeles
231(10)
Joshua E. Heller
George Rymarczuk
33 Treatment of a persistent cervical dural tear
241(4)
Jessica L. Block
D. Greg Anderson
34 Treatment of a ventral thoracic dural defect
245(6)
Ibrahim Hussain
Peter F. Morgenstern
Ali A. Baaj
35 Treatment of a persistent lumbar dural tear
251(4)
Joseph S. Butler
Matthew S. Galetta
Barrett I. Woods
36 Treatment of a chronic postoperative cervical and lumbar spine infection
255(6)
Kamil Okroj
Christopher Kepler
Index 261
Alexander R. Vaccaro, MD, PhD, MBA, graduated Summa Cum Laude from Boston College in 1983 with a B.S. in Biology. He received his M.D. degree from Georgetown University School of Medicine where he was promoted with Distinction. He earned membership in the Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) Honor Society and graduated with honors in 1987. He completed a year of Surgical Internship at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, CA and his Orthopaedic Surgery Residency at Thomas Jefferson University where he graduated in 1992. Dr. Vaccaro completed a Spine Fellowship at the University of San Diego, CA. He earned a PhD in 2007 in the field of Spinal Trauma. He is the Richard H. Rothman Professor and Chairman, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Professor of Neurosurgery at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, PA.

He was the recipient of the Leon Wiltse award given for excellence in leadership and clinical research for spine care by the North American Spine Society (NASS) and is the past President of the American Spinal Injury Association and current President of the Association for Collaborative Spine Research. He has over 530 peer reviewed and 195 non-peer reviewed publications. He has published over 300 book chapters and is editor of over 44 textbooks and co-editor of OKU-Spine I and editor of OKU-8. Dr. Vaccaro is the President of Rothman Institute, Chairman of the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Co-Director of the Regional Spinal Cord Injury Center of the Delaware Valley and Co-Director of Spine Surgery and the Spine Fellowship program at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital where he instructs fellows and residents in the diagnosis and treatment of various spinal problems and disorders.

Ali Baaj, MD is a neurosurgeon who specializes in spinal surgery, with advanced training and expertise in spinal oncology and complex reconstructive surgery for spinal deformity, and both minimally invasive spinal surgery and open complex spine surgery. Before joining the faculty at Weill Cornell, Dr. Baaj served as the director of the Spinal Neurosurgery Program at the University of Arizona at Tucson, where he led the clinical program and founded the multidisciplinary spine conference and spinal research fellowship program. Dr. Baaj was the neurosurgery faculty recipient of the Humanism in Medicine award in 2013 and 2014 while at University of Arizona. Dr. Baaj earned both Bachelors and Masters degrees from Boston University before receiving his M.D. from Boston University College of Medicine in 2004. He completed a general surgery internship at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, followed by a neurosurgical residency at the University of South Florida in Tampa. Dr. Baaj received further training as a Research Fellow at the Spinal Biomechanics Laboratory at Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix and as a Complex Spine Fellow at Johns Hopkins, with an emphasis on advanced techniques in spinal tumor resection and spinal reconstruction. He also completed a two-month traveling fellowship in Paris studying advanced techniques for pediatric deformity and scoliosis, with an emphasis on neuromuscular and idiopathic scoliosis. He is the lead editor of the best-selling, Handbook of Spine Surgery, now in its 2nd edition.

Gregory D. Schroeder, MD is Assistant Professor in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He completed a two-year spine surgery and clinical research fellowship at the Rothman Institute at Thomas Jefferson University. He completed his orthopedic surgery residency program at Northwestern University in Chicago, and holds a Doctor of Medicine from Georgetown University School of Medicine.