Burst fracture of the fifth lumbar vertebra is a rare injury. We report
the cases of seven patients who were treated conservatively by
immobilization for six to eight weeks in a body-jacket cast that included
one lower extremity to the knee. The patients were allowed to walk ten to
fourteen days after the injury. A thoracolumbosacral orthosis was worn for
an additional three months. No patient had an injury to the sacral root.
Two patients had mild lower lumbar motor-root deficits that resolved within
one year. All patients had an occasional backache, and two had intermittent
radicular-type pain in the distribution of the fifth lumbar or first
sacral-nerve root. The degree of compromise of the spinal canal could not
be directly related to the degree of neurological deficit; that is, a large
compromise of the spinal canal did not necessarily result in a major loss
of neurological function. There was no early or late loss of lordosis
between the cephalad end-plate of the fourth lumbar vertebra and the
cephalad aspect of the sacrum, and there were no signs of progressive
collapse of the vertebral body in any patient. In our series, the burst
fractures of the fifth lumbar vertebra were stable injuries that caused
minimum neurological deficits, and treatment by immobilization in a
body-jacket cast was effective.