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Interventional Radiology Vertebroplasty and Kyphoplasty
Vertebral or spinal bone fractures typically occur in women over the age of 60. However, they are also common among younger people whose bones have become fragile due to the long term use of steroids or other drugs to treat diseases such as lupus, asthma and rheumatoid arthritis. In older adults, osteoporosis, a progressive weakening of the bone, is the primary cause of spinal fractures. For many people with osteoporosis, a spinal fracture means severely limited activity, constant pain and a serious reduction in the quality of their lives. For women who have already experienced spinal fractures there have been few effective treatments available until recently. Now, a safe, non-surgical, interventional radiology treatment called vertebroplasty offers hope for those suffering from the pain of vertebral fractures. Vertebroplasty is an outpatient procedure using X-ray imaging and conscious sedation. The interventional radiologist inserts a needle about the width of a small straw through a nick in the skin of the back, directing it under fluoroscopy (continuous moving X-ray imaging) into the fractured vertebra. The physician than injects the medical-grade bone cement into the vertebra. The cement hardens, stabilizes the bone and prevents further collapse. This stops the pain caused by bone rubbing against bone. In addition to vertebroplasty, our Interventional Radiologists also perform kyphoplasty, a slightly more involved technique for treating painful compression fractures of the spine. In this procedure, a balloon is inserted into the collapsed vertebral body and inflated, pushing the bones back to your natural height. Once the balloon is deflated and removed, bone cemtn is then injected into the cabity created by the balloon to satabilized the bone. Kyphoplasty is usually performed under sedation or general anesthesia, often with an overnight hospital stay. Your Interventional Radiologist may recommend kyphoplasty rather than vertebroplasty for treatment of your recent compression fracture as kyphoplasty has been shown to restore some height to the vertebra involved and may allow the bone cement to be delivered with greater precision. Diagnosis These spinal fractures, also called compression fractures, are caused when the weakened vertebrae of the spine collapse - usually in the middle (thoracic) or lower (lumbar) spine. Initially, the fracture may feel like severe back pain. However, when more than one vertebra collapses, loss of height or spinal deformities such as kyphosis or "widow's hump" may result. For some individuals, the fracture stabilizes itself, and the pain goes away. But for many, the pain persists because the crushed bone continues to move and break. Risk Factors for Osteoporosis
Most patients report that their pain is gone or significantly better within 48 hours and that they return to normal activity shortly after the procedure. Studies have shown that from 75 percent to 90 percent of people treated with vertebroplasty will have complete or significant reduction of their pain. For more information or to schedule an appointment with a Lankenau Hospital interventional radiologist,
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