Medagam Narendra Reddy, Dhillon Charanjit Singh, Dwivedi Rishi, Jindal Pankaj Kumar, Ega Shrikant
Department of Spine surgery, MIOT international hospital, Chennai. India.
J Orthop Case Rep. 2018 May-Jun;8(3):58-60. doi: 10.13107/jocr.2250-0685.1108.
Bilateral facetal dislocation without facet fracture, although common in cervical spine, is a very rare entity in lumbar spine with <15 cases reported so far. Such injuries are very unstable involving all the three columns. Neurological insult and visceral affection are commonly associated with bilateral facetal dislocation.
A 22-year-old gentleman presented with ASIA Aparaplegia following road traffic accident. Radiographs/computed tomography scan revealed pure facetal dislocation L1-L2 with no evidence of facet fracture. The patient also had liver laceration. The patient underwent open instrumented reduction along with left-sidedtransforaminal removal of damaged disc and inter body fusion. The patient improved significantly to ASIA C neurological status at 6-month follow-up.
Pure facetal dislocation, although rarely seen in lumbar region, is a very unstable injury. Prompt recognition and early intervention facilitate nursing care and neurological recovery. Recognition of associated injuries is also important.