Open Access
Causes, Treatment and Prevention of Esophageal Fistulas in Anterior Cervical Spine Surgery
Author(s) -
Sun Lin,
Song Yueming,
Liu Limin,
Gong Quan,
Liu Hao,
Li Tao,
Kong Qingquan,
Zeng Jiancheng
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
orthopaedic surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 23
eISSN - 1757-7861
pISSN - 1757-7853
DOI - 10.1111/os.12006
Subject(s) - medicine , surgery , fistula , esophageal ulcer , perforation , debridement (dental) , esophagus , materials science , punching , metallurgy
Objective To evaluate the causes, treatment and prevention of esophageal fistulas after anterior cervical spine surgery. Method Between J anuary 2004 and D ecember 2011, 5 of 2348 patients who underwent anterior cervical surgery in our hospital developed esophageal fistulas (three male and two female patients, average age 34 years). Their diagnoses were cervical injuries (three), cervical spondylosis (one) and cervical tuberculosis (one). Their esophageal fistulas were treated by debridement and exploratory surgery, primary suturing of the perforation and/or sternocleidomastoid myoplasty. If conservative treatment failed or esophageal fistula recurred, plate removal was offered. Postoperative treatment included esophageal rest, enteral nutrition, wound drainage, and antibiotics. Methylene blue was used to evaluate results. Result An esophageal fistula was discovered during anterior cervical surgery in one patient and primary suturing performed. In four patients, fistulas were diagnosed after anterior cervical decompression and fusion. In one of these, only debridement and exploratory surgery were required. In another, a perforation was sutured during debridement and exploratory surgery. In the third, internal fixation was removed because of failure of prolonged conservative treatment. In the fourth, the esophageal fistula recurred repeatedly; he required removal of the hardware and reinforcement with a sternocleidomastoid muscle flap. At 6–48 months follow‐up, all patients were in good condition, symptom free, and without cervical instability or infectious spondylitis. Conclusion Successful management of esophageal fistula after anterior cervical spinal surgery depends on primary closure of the perforation with or without muscle flaps, surgical drainage, esophageal rest and nutritional support, and removal of hardware if necessary. Prevention consists of careful surgery and gentle tissue handling.