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Mount Pleasant Woman First To Have Kyphoplasty Surgery
at ETMC
Oby Marvin Ellis
Tyler Morning Telegraph Saturday, May 20, 2000
A 79-year-old Mount Pleasant woman was the first East Texan
to undergo minimally invasive Band-Aid surgery to repair a
compression fracture in the spine Friday morning at East Texas
Medical Center, using a cement-like substance to create an
internal cast.
The procedure - called KyphoplastyTM - was approved in 1998
by the Food and Drug Administration for vertebrae compression
fractures associated with osteoporosis, a disease which causes
abnormal loss of bony tissue. It is common in postmenopausal
women or those who have undergone extensive steroid therapy.
About three months ago, Mrs. Annie McCollum started experiencing
back pain caused by osteoporosis, which makes bones brittle
and often results in stress fractures. She was the first patient
in East Texas to have the 1-2 hour surgical procedure, while
becoming one of 400 nationally to undergo Kyphoplasty.
She was operated on by Dr. Jon Ledlie, a board certified
neurosurgeon with Tyler Neurosurgical Associates, who made
two small incisions in the back and then closed each with
one stitch and Band-Aids.
During the surgery, he inserted tubes to create a path to
the spine using fluoroscopy to guide to correct position.
Special balloons then were inflated to raise the collapsed
bone, creating an enlarged space inside the vertebrae at the
fracture line.
After removing the balloons, Dr. Ledlie, who graduated from
Oklahoma University School of Medicine, used specially designed
instruments to fill this area with a cement-like substance
to strengthen the spine. The cement-like substance requires
about 4-6 centimeters of the material to fix fractures, which
is about the size of a thimble.
Dr. Ledlie, a native of Calgary, Alberta, Canada, said Mrs.
McCollum was doing fie Friday afternoon and is expected to
go home Saturday. He said 70-90 percent of patients experience
immediate relief.
The material we use hardens similar to the denture material
dentists use, giving solid support to the spine, he said.
When inserted, it has the consistency of tooth paste but with
the heat from the body, it hardens immediately. This fixes
the fracture and prevents further collapse of the treated
vertebral body (thick block of bone at the front of each vertebra).
He noted the following key features of Kyphoplasty, compared
to conventional medical therapy or surgery:
- Immediate pain relief in a large percent of cases.
- Most patients return to activities of daily living.
- Stabilizes vertebral fracture.
- Reduces spinal deformity by restoring vertebral body anatomy
and height.
- Usually minimally invasive.
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