Twenty-six adults, ranging in age from nineteen to fifty-eight years
old, were treated for idiopathic scoliosis by two-stage anterior and
posterior spinal fusion. The goals of the combined procedure were to
increase correction of the curve and decrease the rate of pseudarthrosis.
Preoperatively, the major curves measured an average of 83 degrees, and on
the best side-bend they averaged 59 degrees, a 29 per cent degree of
flexibility. At the time of discharge from the hospital the curves had
improved to an average of 44 degrees, a correction of the preoperative
curve of 39 degrees or 47 per cent. At an average length of follow-up of
forty-nine months, the major curves measured an average of 50 degrees, a 41
per cent correction compared with the initial curves. Twenty-three of the
major curves were better than when they were measured on the preoperative
radiograph of the best side-bend, by an average of 15 degrees, but eight
curves were either the same or worse. No patient had pseudarthrosis or
permanent neurological injury. It is our conclusion that a two-stage
anterior and posterior fusion is of value for the treatment of the adult
who has a rigid curve that requires maximum correction to allow the head,
shoulders, and torso to be centered over the pelvis. We do not recommend
the use of instrumentation for the anterior fusion as this did not increase
the correction of the curve in this series of patients.