# Posterior-Only Reduction of High-Grade Traumatic Thoracic Spondyloptosis

**Authors:** Paarth Patel, Thomas Tyler Patterson, Michael McGinity, Cristian Gragnaniello

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.104311 · 2026-02-26

## TL;DR

This case report presents a new surgical technique for treating severe spinal injuries using a posterior-only approach, avoiding more invasive methods.

## Contribution

A novel posterior-only reduction technique using monoaxial screws and a distraction trauma system is introduced for high-grade thoracic spondyloptosis.

## Key findings

- The technique reduced sagittal subluxation by 12 mm and coronal translation by 19 mm.
- Traumatic kyphosis improved from 24.6° pre-operatively to 7.8° post-operatively.
- Neurological function improved post-operatively with maintained spinal alignment.

## Abstract

Traumatic thoracic spondyloptosis is a rare, severe spinal injury that poses a major surgical challenge. Traditional approaches often involve complex mechanical maneuvers and increased patient risk. This case report describes a posterior-only reduction and stabilization technique using a distraction trauma system, monoaxial screws, and neuromonitoring, offering an alternative to more invasive strategies such as corpectomy or multi-rod constructs.

A patient with traumatic lateral T6-T7 spondyloptosis underwent single-stage posterior reduction using a spine distraction trauma system. The technique employed monoaxial pedicle screws and controlled application of multi-plane forces while avoiding early exposure of neural elements during reduction, reducing intra-operative risk. The spondyloptosis was reduced to a near-anatomic position, reversing approximately 12 mm of sagittal subluxation and 19 mm of coronal translation. Traumatic kyphosis improved from 24.6° pre-operatively to 7.8° post-operatively. Post-operative imaging confirmed maintained alignment, and neurological function showed continued improvement at follow-up.

This posterior-only technique enabled effective and controlled reduction of a high-grade fracture-dislocation without requiring anterior corpectomy or complex instrumentation. Compared to existing methods, such as Cobb elevator-assisted leverage, multi-rod constructs, or corpectomy, the described approach simplifies the surgical workflow. The use of monoaxial screws and a distraction trauma system may present a safe and reproducible strategy for managing severe thoracic spondyloptosis.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** spinal injury (MESH:D013124), Traumatic (MESH:D014947), kyphosis (MESH:D007738), dislocation (MESH:D004204), fracture (MESH:D050723), Thoracic Spondyloptosis (MESH:D013896)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13032801/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13032801