Pc. Mcafee et al., ANTERIOR THORACIC CORPECTOMY FOR SPINAL-CORD DECOMPRESSION PERFORMED ENDOSCOPICALLY, Surgical laparoscopy & endoscopy, 5(5), 1995, pp. 339-348
A prospective study was undertaken during the past 3 years to investig
ate the effectiveness of thoracoscopic corpectomy-endoscopic removal o
f the vertebral body in 15 cases (8 for pathologic fractures for tumor
s, 5 for traumatic fractures and 2 for infections). The average age of
the patients was 53.2 years (range 28-85 years). The vertebral levels
of corpectomy ranged from T3 to L1. The mean operating time was 211 m
in (range 83-450 min) and the mean estimated blood loss was 890 ml (ra
nge 150-2,800 ml). The postoperative morbidity appeared to be more fav
orable than with open thoracotomy [Alband OW, Corkill G. Thoracic disk
herniation: treatment and prognosis. Spine 1979; 4:41-6; Landreneau R
J, Hazelrigg SR, Mack NJ. Postoperative pain-related morbidity: video-
assisted thoracic surgery versus thoracotomy. Ann Thorne Surg (in pres
s); McAfee PC. Complications of anterior approaches to the thoracolumb
ar spine: emphasis on Kaneda instrumentation. Clin Orthop 1994;306: 11
0-9; McAfee PC, Bohlman HH, Yuan HA. Anterior decompression of traumat
ic thoracolumbar fractures with incomplete neurological deficit using
a retroperitoneal approach. J Bone Joint Surg [Am] 1985;67:89-104; Reg
an JJ, Mack MJ, Picetti GD, Guyer RD, Hochschuler SH, Rashbaum RF. A c
omparison of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) with open tho
racotomy in thoracic spinal surgery. Today's Ther Trends 1994;11:203-1
8.] because the mean chest tube duration was 1.22 days (range 1-3 days
), the mean length of time in the intensive care unit was 2 days (rang
e 1-4 days), and the mean length of total hospitalization was 6.5 days
(range 2-12 days). Overall, the ability to visualize the anterior sur
face of the dura during corpectomy was better endoscopically than with
open thoracotomy techniques-improved magnification, the ability of th
e operative assistant to see and therefore suction more efficiently, a
nd the perspective of visualization was improved. It was possible to p
lace the 30 degrees angled endoscope within the defect left by the res
ected vertebral body and look directly posteriorly at the dura, visual
izing the epidural vessels and dural pulsations at close range. The li
miting factor in wide application of the technique is the absence of a
commercially available internal fixation system that can be applied e
ndoscopically.