Publication | Closed Access
Destructive Lesions of the Spine in Rheumatoid Ankylosing Spondylitis
54
Citations
0
References
1969
Year
PathologyThoracic SpineSpinal DisorderOrthopaedic SurgerySeparate LesionsAxial SpondyloarthritisComplete ParalysisOsteoarthritisNeuropathologyRheumatoid ArthritisRheumatologySpinal Cord InjuryDestructive LesionsSpine SurgerySpinal FractureLumbosacral RadiculopathyDegenerative SpinePosterior ElementsSpinal FusionMedicine
Three patients with ankylosing spondylitis complicated by destructive vertebral lesions have been reported. One patient had three separate lesions over a ten-year period. Another patient sustained a fracture through the posterior elements prior to the occurrence of granuloma formation of the intervertebral space. The third patient had spinal-cord compression with complete paralysis from which he had a partial recovery following recumbency, lateral rachitomy, and fusion. The etiology of these lesions is unknown, but it is suggested that they represent response to delayed union or non-union of fractures occurring in rheumatoid spondylitis.