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Novel Nerve-Sparing In Situ Assembly of an Expandable Titanium Cage to Maximize Endplate Coverage After Posterior Corpectomy for Comminuted Lumbar Burst Fractures.

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The ability to maximize corpectomy cage endcap size and vertebral endplate coverage after corpectomy for lumbar burst fractures (L1-L5) is limited by the presence of lumbar nerve roots and the larger cross-sectional area of the lumbar endplates relative to the restrictive corridor for cage insertion. This work aims to provide details and clinical examples of a novel operative technique for 3-column reconstruction and stabilization of comminuted lumbar burst fractures.

METHODS: Through a standard posterior midline approach and following posterior instrumentation and lateral extracavitary corpectomy, an in-situ assembly of a modular corpectomy cage that respects adjacent neural structures, restores segmental alignment, and maximizes endplate coverage across a lordotic segment is completed.

RESULTS: Radiographic evidence of anatomic spinal reconstruction and stabilization with complete or near-complete endplate coverage without incurrence of new clinical deficit after this novel treatment of lumbar burst fractures.

CONCLUSION: The fixation approach described in this report may be a valuable modification to a long-standing technique used for treating comminuted lumbar burst fractures (L1-L5) from a posterior-only approach without incurring additional neurological deficits and by improving endplate and apophyseal ring coverage.

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