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SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR KYPHOSCOLIOSIS IN COHEN SYNDROME

Cohen syndrome is a very rare disease. Complication by spinal deformity has been reported, but management and surgery for spinal deformity in Cohen syndrome has not been previously described. The objective of this study was to examine the outcome of surgical treatment for kyphoscoliosis of Cohen syn...

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Autores principales: IMAGAMA, SHIRO, TSUJI, TAICHI, OHARA, TETSUYA, KATAYAMA, YOSHITO, GOTO, MANABU, ISHIGURO, NAOKI, KAWAKAMI, NORIAKI
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nagoya University 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4345665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24640185
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author IMAGAMA, SHIRO
TSUJI, TAICHI
OHARA, TETSUYA
KATAYAMA, YOSHITO
GOTO, MANABU
ISHIGURO, NAOKI
KAWAKAMI, NORIAKI
author_facet IMAGAMA, SHIRO
TSUJI, TAICHI
OHARA, TETSUYA
KATAYAMA, YOSHITO
GOTO, MANABU
ISHIGURO, NAOKI
KAWAKAMI, NORIAKI
author_sort IMAGAMA, SHIRO
collection PubMed
description Cohen syndrome is a very rare disease. Complication by spinal deformity has been reported, but management and surgery for spinal deformity in Cohen syndrome has not been previously described. The objective of this study was to examine the outcome of surgical treatment for kyphoscoliosis of Cohen syndrome with a literature review. The patient was a 14-year-old male with the characteristics of Cohen syndrome: truncal obesity, mental retardation, arachnodactyly, microcephalia, and a facial malformation. Scoliosis was conservatively treated with a brace at 13 years of age, but the spinal deformity rapidly progressed within a year. Plain radiographs before surgery showed scoliosis of 47° (T5-T11) and 79° (T11-L3), and kyphosis of 86° (T7-L1). One-stage anteroposterior corrective fusion of T4-L3 was scheduled after 2-week Halo traction. Postoperative respiratory management was carefully performed because of Cohen syndrome-associated facial malformation, obesity, and reduced muscle tonus. Respiration was managed with intubation until the following day and no respiratory problems occurred. After surgery, thoracolumbar scoliosis was 28° (correction rate: 65%). Kyphosis was markedly improved from 86° to 20°, achieving a favorable balance of the trunk. The outcome is favorable at 6.5 years after surgery. In conclusion, Cohen syndrome is often complicated by spinal deformity, particularly kyphosis, that is likely to progress even in adulthood. In our patient, spinal deformity progressed within a short period, even with brace treatment. Surgery should be required before progression to the severe spinal deformity with careful attention to general anesthesia.
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spelling pubmed-43456652015-03-04 SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR KYPHOSCOLIOSIS IN COHEN SYNDROME IMAGAMA, SHIRO TSUJI, TAICHI OHARA, TETSUYA KATAYAMA, YOSHITO GOTO, MANABU ISHIGURO, NAOKI KAWAKAMI, NORIAKI Nagoya J Med Sci Case Report Cohen syndrome is a very rare disease. Complication by spinal deformity has been reported, but management and surgery for spinal deformity in Cohen syndrome has not been previously described. The objective of this study was to examine the outcome of surgical treatment for kyphoscoliosis of Cohen syndrome with a literature review. The patient was a 14-year-old male with the characteristics of Cohen syndrome: truncal obesity, mental retardation, arachnodactyly, microcephalia, and a facial malformation. Scoliosis was conservatively treated with a brace at 13 years of age, but the spinal deformity rapidly progressed within a year. Plain radiographs before surgery showed scoliosis of 47° (T5-T11) and 79° (T11-L3), and kyphosis of 86° (T7-L1). One-stage anteroposterior corrective fusion of T4-L3 was scheduled after 2-week Halo traction. Postoperative respiratory management was carefully performed because of Cohen syndrome-associated facial malformation, obesity, and reduced muscle tonus. Respiration was managed with intubation until the following day and no respiratory problems occurred. After surgery, thoracolumbar scoliosis was 28° (correction rate: 65%). Kyphosis was markedly improved from 86° to 20°, achieving a favorable balance of the trunk. The outcome is favorable at 6.5 years after surgery. In conclusion, Cohen syndrome is often complicated by spinal deformity, particularly kyphosis, that is likely to progress even in adulthood. In our patient, spinal deformity progressed within a short period, even with brace treatment. Surgery should be required before progression to the severe spinal deformity with careful attention to general anesthesia. Nagoya University 2013-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4345665/ /pubmed/24640185 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. To view the details of this license, please visit (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Case Report
IMAGAMA, SHIRO
TSUJI, TAICHI
OHARA, TETSUYA
KATAYAMA, YOSHITO
GOTO, MANABU
ISHIGURO, NAOKI
KAWAKAMI, NORIAKI
SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR KYPHOSCOLIOSIS IN COHEN SYNDROME
title SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR KYPHOSCOLIOSIS IN COHEN SYNDROME
title_full SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR KYPHOSCOLIOSIS IN COHEN SYNDROME
title_fullStr SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR KYPHOSCOLIOSIS IN COHEN SYNDROME
title_full_unstemmed SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR KYPHOSCOLIOSIS IN COHEN SYNDROME
title_short SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR KYPHOSCOLIOSIS IN COHEN SYNDROME
title_sort surgical treatment for kyphoscoliosis in cohen syndrome
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4345665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24640185
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