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Query: UNIPROT:P01889 (ankylosing spondylitis)
5,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fracture of the ankylosed cervical spine is a much more serious problem than injury to the normal vertebral collumn. The ankylosed spine may be fractured following relatively mild trauma attributable to loss of flexibility and increased fragility from osteoporosis. The fused spine breaks like a solid long bone, usually completely. Review of the literature shows that the incidence of neurological deficits and the mortality are significantly higher than in comparable patients without ankylosing spondylitis. The fracture often is difficult to reduce and maintain in proper alignment. Neurologic change from spinal cord compression may occur even while the patient is in skeletal traction. Treatment by skull tong traction and anterior fusion is outlined.--Two cases of cervical fracture dislocation causing neurological deficits in patients with ankylosing spondylitis are presented and the relevant literature is cited.
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PMID:[Fracture of the cervical spine in patients with ankylosing spondylarthritis (author's transl)]. 84 94

Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) frequently gives rise to some diagnostic confusion, as it may radiologically mimic ankylosing spondylitis (AS). A patient with features of DISH and AS is described and the literature is reviewed. The diagnostic value of sacroiliac computerized tomography is emphasized. The role of spinal mobility in the appearance of the enthesiophytes is discussed since our patient, who underwent a segmental fusion, presented different radiological features in the mobile segment and the fused region.
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PMID:Simultaneous occurrence of diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis and ankylosing spondylitis in the same patient. 129 52

From June, 1989 to March, 1991, 24 cases with various spinal disorders were treated in our department using the Dick technique. The results were as follows: In the fresh fracture group (7 cases), all the spine fractures were reduced anatomically: the 2 cases without neurological defects returned to work 3 months after operation; the 3 cases with incomplete paraplegia had rapid neurological recovery; and the 2 cases with complete paraplegia showed no recovery after operation. In the late fracture group (10 cases), traumatic kyphotic curves were partially reduced and back pain was decreased markedly in all: Muscle power was increased significantly in 3 cases; spasticity was remarkably improved in 2 cases; 3 cases obtained complete cure of incontinence; and 4 cases had no significant improvement. In 3 cases with ankylosing spondylitis, the initial average kyphotic curve was 73.3 degrees, while the postoperative average curve was 28.3 degrees. The result of treatment of spinal stenosis due to degenerative spondylolisthesis (1 case) was good; slipping vertebrae were stabilized and fused with the Dick system after thorough decompression. In 1 tumor and 2 Tb-spine cases, the patients recovered and were ambulatory soon after operation.
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PMID:The application of Dick instrumentation in spine surgery. 142 57

Twenty-eight occipitocervical fusions using the onlay technique were performed in 27 patients ranging in age from 13 to 77 years (average age, 47.6 years). The indications for fusion included neurologic involvement from atlantoaxial instability associated with superior migration of the odontoid and destructive changes at the occiput-C1-C2 articulation, causing pain unrelieved by conservative treatment. Preoperative diagnoses included rheumatoid arthritis, congenital anomalies, posttraumatic, failed C1-C2 fusions, ankylosing spondylitis, and tumor. A standard posterior exposure of occiput-C1-C2 was used, and iliac crest bone graft was placed over the area to be fused. Postoperative immobilization consisted of skull tong traction, minerva jacket, and halo apparatus. There were no neurologic complications, two superficial wound infections, and minor difficulties with halo loosening. There was one perioperative death. Primary fusion was obtained in 89% of patients at an average of 12.8 weeks. Occipitocervical fusion by the onlay technique is safe, requires no internal fixation, and has a high success rate when compared with other methods of obtaining fusion in the occipitocervical region.
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PMID:Onlay technique for occipitocervical fusion. 161 38

Fractures of the spine in diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) have rarely been reported. Only four cases could be found in the world literature. Eight new cases with nine fractures are reported in this study. The critical features are the frequent delays in diagnosis (three of eight patients) and the high rate of immediate and delayed neurologic deficit (seven of eight patients). Two fracture patterns occurred in this group. The first type occurred through the midportion of an ankylosed segment of the spine and involved the vertebral body (five fractures). The second type occurred at the top or bottom of a fused segment (four fractures). The latter were disk disruptions or odontoid fractures. This is a marked difference from spinal fractures in ankylosing spondylitis, in which the majority are transdiskal fractures. The difference can be explained on the basis of the different pathology of these two disease processes. Careful evaluation of patients with DISH who sustain trauma is critical. Treatment of this rare injury should be early stabilization of the spine to avoid complications of nonunion, deformity, neurologic injury, and death.
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PMID:Fractures of the spine in diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis. 204 83

There is a growing consensus that the mechanism leading to extensive discovertebral destruction (type III) in most patients with ankylosing spondylitis relates to fracture and subsequent pseudarthrosis. We introduced the term "pseudopseudarthrosis" to describe (in our case) the occurrence of abnormal motion between 2 fused spinal segments, resulting in extensive discovertebral destruction without fracture or pseudarthrosis.
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PMID:Pseudopseudarthrosis in a patient with ankylosing spondylitis. 231 27

In cases of paravertebral ossification in humans, the radiographic characteristics usually lead to a specific diagnosis. Similar manifestations are sometimes described in other species. We applied knowledge of the radiographic appearance of spinal alterations in modern humans to the evaluation of 48 fused thoracic and lumbar fossilized spine specimens from the prehistoric saber-toothed cat (Smilodon californicus), in which prominent paravertebral ossification is frequently found. Inspection, conventional radiography, and, in some cases, CT and fluoride analyses were performed. The spinal alterations in the saber-toothed cat, which previously were believed to be caused primarily by trauma, showed characteristics of three major pathologic processes: trauma, diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis, and inflammatory disease of a type similar to ankylosing spondylitis. The last two categories have rarely been diagnosed in species other than humans. The results suggest that diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis and inflammatory spondyloarthropathy are diseases that occurred in prehistoric times and are not confined to the human species.
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PMID:Patterns of paravertebral ossification in the prehistoric saber-toothed cat. 310 4

Between 1970 and 1979, 17 patients underwent conversion of ankylosed hip to total hip arthroplasty. The patients' ages ranged from 38 to 82 years and the duration of fusion prior to conversion ranged from five to 60 years. The primary indication for conversion to total hip replacement in all patients was disabling pain in the low back, the ipsilateral knee, and the contralateral hip. The reason for ankylosis varied: five patients had previously undergone fusion for posttraumatic arthritis, two patients for tuberculous arthritis, six patients for osteoarthritis, one for a previous old slipped capital femoral epiphysis which had undergone spontaneous fusion after internal fixation, and two patients for ankylosing spondylitis. Relief of preoperative pain in the lower back was seen in 12 of 13 patients, knee pain was relieved in four out of four patients, and contralateral hip pain was relieved in seven out of 10 patients. Complications included heterotopic ossification, infection, perforation of the posterior shaft of the femur, and failure of trochanteric fixation with subsequent dislocation. Predictable pain relief from pain in the contralateral hip was less predictable and directly related to the degree of osteoarthritis in the contralateral hip. In these patients it is suggested that conversion of the fused hip to total hip arthroplasty be staged with total hip replacement in the contralateral hip as well. The end results were least satisfactory in patients with ankylosing spondylitis.
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PMID:Conversion of ankylosed hips to total hip arthroplasty. 645 15

From June, 1989 to March, 1991, 24 cases were treated in our department with the Dick technique. The study population included 7 patients with fresh horacolumber spine fracture, 10 with late spinal fracture (15 of the above 17 cases had incomplete paraplegia), 3 with ankylosing spondylitis, 2 with tuberculosis, and one each with spondylolisthesis and spine tumor. The results of these 24 cases were as follows. In the fresh fracture group, all the spine fractures were reduced completely. The 2 patients without neurological defects returned to work 3 months after operation. The 3 with incomplete paraplegia had rapid neurological recovery and could walk with a brace 3 months after surgical treatment. The 2 with complete paraplegia did not recover after toperation. In the late fracture group, traumatic kyphotic curve were reduced partially and back pain was decreased markedly in all 10 cases. Muscular power was increased significantly in 3 cases; they are all able to walk with a cane. Spasticity was remarkably improved in 2 patients after operation; they can now walk with crutches. Three patients obtained complete cure of incontinence. Four patients had no significant improvement. In the 3 patients with ankylosing spondylitis, the initial average kyphotic curve was 73.3 degrees, while the postoperative average curve was 28.3 degrees. The result in treating spinal stenosis due to degenerative spondylolisthesis was good: the slipping vertebrae were stabilized and fused with the Dick system after thorough decompression. In the tumor and Tb-spine cases, the patients recovered and were ambulatory soon after operation, thanks to rigid internal fixation.
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PMID:[The application of Dick instrumentation in the field of spine surgery]. 832 36

Although occipitocervical fusion is frequently used for instability of the upper cervical spine and the occipitocervical articulation, most currently used techniques have one or more of the following disadvantages: the necessity for sublaminar wires, the use of occipital screws, a fixed angle of instrumentation, or the necessity for routine postoperative halo immobilization. Moreover, many reported techniques are associated with a high rate of nonunion or instrumentation failure. We present our experience with a technically simple method of obtaining rigid occipitocervical arthrodesis using a 5-mm malleable rod that is fixed to the skull by a pair of wires passed through four suboccipital burr holes. Segmental spinal fixation is achieved with Wisconsin interspinous wires and is occasionally supplemented with sublaminar wires. Supplemental autogenous bone graft is used in all cases. A cervical collar is routinely used for postoperative immobilization. The results of treatment were retrospectively reviewed in 16 patients with an average age of 49.4 years (range, 9-69). Mean follow-up was 24 months (range, 12-36 mo). The indication for fusion was instability of the occiput-C1-C2 complex as a result of Chiari malformation, rheumatoid disease, skull base tumor resection, basilar invagination, ankylosing spondylitis, Down's syndrome, cervical laminectomy, and trauma. The average number of levels fused was 5.4 (range, O-C3 to O-T3). Successful occipitocervical arthrodesis was achieved in all but one of the surviving patients. The single patient with a pseudarthrosis was successfully managed with supplemental bone grafting and halo immobilization. There were two deaths from medical complications in chronically ill patients. Other complications included one postoperative instrumentation loosening, one myocardial infarction, and one superficial occipital decubitus. In conclusion, rodding and segmental interspinous wiring is an effective, technically simple method of obtaining rigid occipitocervical fixation, which obviates the need for bulky orthoses.
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PMID:Occipitocervical fusion with a five-millimeter malleable rod and segmental fixation. 843 57


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