From July 1986 to August 1993 we performed 24 pediatric cervical spine
screw fixation procedures on 23 patients 16 years of age or less. The
types of cervical instrumentation procedures performed were as follow
s: anterior cervical plates 12, posterior C1-2 screw fixations 8, post
erior lateral mass plates 2, odontoid screw fixations 2. The mean age
of all patients was 14.2 years (range 6-16). Indications for operation
included traumatic instability in 20 cases, congenital instability in
1 case, 2 cases of postoperative swan neck deformity, and one reopera
tion for early graft and hardware failure. Six of the 23 patients had
persistent instability following previous failed fusions (3 with 1 pri
or surgery, 2 with 2 prior surgeries, and 1 with 3 prior surgeries). E
ight patients had improvement of their neurological status following o
peration and 15 remained at their preoperative level of neurological f
unction. No patient was worse neurologically after their procedure. Th
ere were no long-term instrumentation, graft or fusion failures. Two c
omplications occurred. One was the aforementioned graft and hardware f
ailure requiring reoperation, the other was a superficial wound infect
ion treated successfully with antibiotics. We feel that cervical spine
fixation techniques have increased our ability to stabilize the pedia
tric cervical spine and have proven to be safe and effective.