The utility of preoperative computed tomography-guided screw marking in thoracic spine surgery
Christopher Marvin Jesse, Aatharshan Kannathasan, Ralph T. Schär, Johannes Goldberg, Andreas Raabe, Jan Gralla, Johannes Kaesmacher, Tomas Dobrocky, Eike Immo Piechowiak

TL;DR
Preoperative CT-guided screw marking helps prevent wrong-level surgeries in thoracic spine operations and improves surgical accuracy.
Contribution
A novel preoperative CT-guided screw marking technique is introduced to prevent wrong-level thoracic spine surgeries.
Findings
WLS occurred in only one patient in the control group and none in the screw group.
Surgical complications were similar between groups.
CT-guided screw marking allows precise intraoperative vertebral localization.
Abstract
Wrong-level surgery (WLS) is a preventable yet severe complication in spinal surgery, particularly for pathologies located in the thoracic spine, where localizing the intended level is more challenging compared to the lumbar or cervical spine, which have more distinct landmark structures and fewer vertebral bodies. Evaluate the impact of preoperative, computed tomography (CT)-guided screw marking on avoiding WLS and optimizing intraoperative workflows. We conducted a retrospective case-control study at Bern University Hospital, enrolling all patients treated with thoracic spinal surgery between February 2017 and August 2022. Patients that received preoperative, CT-guided screw marking in the pedicle at the index level were compared to those without preoperative marking. Data included clinical features, radiological parameters, and complications. Primary endpoint: occurrence of WLS.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Imaging and Analysis · Spinal Fractures and Fixation Techniques · Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology
