Arogya Health

Introduction

Spinal fractures are serious injuries that can occur due to trauma (such as falls or road traffic accidents), osteoporosis, or underlying disease processes. Traditionally, many spinal fractures required extensive open surgery, prolonged bed rest, and long recovery periods.

Current advances in neurosurgical techniques and imaging technology, now offer effective treatment options for a wide range of spinal fractures, while minimizing tissue damage, blood loss, pain, and hospital stay. This is the beauty of minimally invasive spine surgery (MISS)

The goal of minimally invasive treatment is to stabilize the spine, relieve pain, protect neurological function, and allow early mobilization, all while reducing surgical risk.

Understanding Spinal Fractures:

The spine is made up of 33 stacked bones (vertebrae) that protect the spinal cord and allow movement. A fracture may involve:

  • Collapse of the vertebral body
  • Disruption of spinal alignment
  • Compression of nerves or the spinal cord
  • Injury to stabilizing ligaments

Common causes include:

  • High-energy trauma: falls from height, accidents
  • Osteoporosis: fragile bones fracturing even after minor trauma
  • Pathological fractures: due to tumors or infections

Most commonly the thoracic or lumbar spine get fractured due to osteoporosis or vertebral body diseases. The cervical spine gets fractured in high energy trauma such as road traffic accidents or falls.

Not all spinal fractures need surgery, but unstable fractures, severe pain, progressive deformity, or neurological risk often require intervention.

What Is Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery?

Minimally invasive spine surgery uses small skin incisions, specialized instruments, and real-time imaging (X-ray or navigation systems) to treat spinal conditions with minimal disruption to muscles and soft tissues.

Compared to conventional open surgery, MISS aims to:

  • Preserve normal anatomy
  • Reduce postoperative pain
  • Lower infection risk
  • Enable faster recovery and rehabilitation

Minimally Invasive Treatment Options for Spinal Fractures:

1. Vertebroplasty

Vertebroplasty involves injecting medical bone cement into a fractured vertebra through a needle under imaging guidance. This procedure strengthens a fractured bone without significantly changing its height.

Best suited for:

  • Painful osteoporotic compression fractures(< 30 % reduction)
  • Certain pathological fractures

Benefits:

  • Rapid pain relief
  • Procedure is usually completed within 30–45 minutes
  • Often performed under local or short general anesthesias
  • Early mobilization, often the same day


2. Kyphoplasty

Kyphoplasty is a refined version of vertebroplasty. A small balloon is first inserted and inflated to partially restore vertebral height before cement injection. It is more suitable for rapid restoration of height in more compressed vertebral fractures (>30 % height reduction)

Advantages over vertebroplasty:

  • Better correction of spinal deformity (kyphosis)
  • Reduced cement leakage risk in selected cases


3. Percutaneous Pedicle Screw Fixation

For unstable fractures, minimally invasive percutaneous pedicle screws and rods can be placed through small incisions to stabilize the spine.

Indications:

  • Traumatic thoracolumbar fractures
  • Fractures with ligament injury
  • Fractures at risk of collapse or deformity


Key advantages:

  • Minimal muscle damage
  • Reduced blood loss
  • Strong internal stabilization
  • Faster return to sitting and walking

In selected cases, this may be combined with vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty for added strength.

4. Minimally Invasive Decompression (When Required)

If a fracture causes pressure on spinal nerves or the spinal cord, targeted minimally invasive decompression may be performed to relieve compression while preserving stability.

Benefits of Minimally Invasive Treatment

  • Smaller scars
  • Less postoperative pain
  • Shorter hospital stay
  • Lower infection and complication rates
  • Early mobilization and rehabilitation
  • Faster return to daily activities

These benefits are particularly important in elderly patients, osteoporotic individuals, and patients with medical comorbidities.

Who Is a Candidate?

Not every spinal fracture requires surgery, and not every patient is suitable for a minimally invasive approach. These treatments are only offered when patient has severe pain, instability of the spine, progressive deformity or neurological deficit. Careful evaluation includes:

  • Clinical examination
  • X-rays, CT scans, and MRI
  • Assessment of spinal stability and neurological status
  • Bone quality and overall medical fitness

Treatment is always individualized, balancing safety, effectiveness, and long-term spinal health.

Risks and Limitations

While minimally invasive procedures are generally safe, potential risks include:

  • Infection
  • Bleeding
  • Cement leakage (in vertebroplasty/kyphoplasty)
  • Hardware-related complications
  • Need for additional surgery in rare cases

A detailed discussion is essential before deciding on treatment.

Conclusion

Minimally invasive treatments have transformed the management of spinal fractures. By combining modern imaging, refined surgical techniques, and sound clinical judgment, we can now offer effective stabilization and pain relief with significantly reduced surgical trauma.

If you or a loved one has suffered a spinal fracture, early consultation with a neurosurgeon can help determine whether a minimally invasive approach is appropriate and ensure the best possible outcome.

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