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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Luc Clément is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Luc Clément.


Spine | 2008

Restoration of Thoracic Kyphosis by Posterior Instrumentation in Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis : Comparative Radiographic Analysis of Two Methods of Reduction

Jean-Luc Clément; Edouard Chau; Charles Kimkpe; Marie-José Vallade

Study Design. A retrospective comparison of radiographic results for 2 consecutive series of patients treated for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) by posterior instrumentations with thoracic screws using 2 methods of reduction: sequential approximation by cantilever reduction (CR) and simultaneous translation technique on 2 rods (ST2R). Objective. To compare correction of thoracic hypokyphosis and coronal radiographic results between the 2 methods of reduction. Summary of Background Data. Publications concerning AIS confirm the moderate correction of thoracic hypokyphosis by posterior instrumentation with hooks and also with pedicle screws. Methods. Forty-four patients with AIS (Lenke type 1, 2, 3) underwent a posterior spinal fusion and instrumentation (CR series: 21 patients – ST2R series: 23 patients). Three groups of preoperative kyphosis were generated: 12 patients with severe hypokyphosis (≤10°) (5 in CR series and 7 in ST2R series); 12 patients with mild hypokyphosis (10–20°) (5 and 7 patients, respectively) and 20 with normal kyphosis (>20°) (11 and 9 patients, respectively). Thoracic kyphosis (T4–T12) and Cobb angle measurements of major and minor curves were evaluated by an independent observer. The minimum follow-up was 2 years. Results. At final follow-up, regarding patients with a severe preoperative hypokyphosis, the mean gain was 14° in the CR series (8° preoperative–22° postoperative) and 27° in the ST2R series (3–30°) (P = 0.018). Concerning patients with mild hypokyphosis, the mean gains were, respectively, 8° (17–25°) and 18° (16–34°) (P = 0.052). After surgery, 3 patients of CR series had hypokyphosis whereas the patients of the ST2R series all had normal kyphosis. In coronal plane, the mean correction of scoliosis was similar for both groups (75% vs. 69%; P = 0.177). Conclusion. Simultaneous translation on 2 rods provides a better correction of thoracic kyphosis than the sequential approximation by CR on patients with preoperative hypokyphosis. This surgical technique restores normal thoracic kyphosis in all cases.


Pediatric Radiology | 1994

Percutaneous resection of osteoid osteoma under CT guidance in eight children

C. Baunin; C. Puget; J. Assoun; J.-J. Railhac; Jean-Philippe Cahuzac; Jean-Luc Clément; J. Sales de Gauzy

In eight children with suspected osteoid osteoma, a percutaneous resection under CT guidance was performed. The specificdrill resection system we currently use includes a 7-mm-diameter toothed drill. Osteoid osteomas were located in the appendicular skeleton in seven children and in the spine (second lumbar vertebral body) in one. All eight patients were successfully treated with complete relief of pain. There was no recurrence of symptoms during a follow-up period of 8–35 months. CT guidance was accurate enough to allow a focal bone excision, and no subsequent bone repair was needed. Histological confirmation was obtained in all cases. This simple and safe technique, when feasible, seems to be an effective means of treatment of osteoid osteoma in children.


Spine | 2012

Simultaneous translation on two rods to treat adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: radiographic results in coronal, sagittal, and transverse plane of a series of 62 patients with a minimum follow-up of two years.

Jean-Luc Clément; Edouard Chau; Anne Geoffray; Marie-José Vallade

Study Design. Retrospective analysis of a consecutive cohort of 62 adolescent patients treated by posterior spinal fusion (PSF) with a minimum follow-up of 2 years. Objective. To present sagittal and coronal results of a specific method of reduction: the simultaneous translation on 2 rods (ST2R). Summary of Background Data. The long-term outcome of surgically treated scoliosis is dependent not only on the coronal correction but also on restoration of sagittal curves. Recent publications confirm the moderate correction of thoracic hypokyphosis by posterior instrumentation with hooks or pedicle screws. Methods. Radiographic parameters were measured preoperatively and at 6 weeks, 1 year, and last follow-up (between 2 and 7.4 years) in a consecutive cohort of 62 patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) treated by PSF. All operative procedures were performed by the same surgeon using stable anchorages such as screws or self-stabilizing claws. The screws and claws included a polyaxial-threaded extension, which was fixed to the rod with connecting clamps. Reduction of the deformity was obtained by gradual and alternate tightening of the nuts on all threaded extensions on both rods, which allowed the vertebrae to gradually approach the rods while the translation maneuver was performed. Results. In the coronal plane, the average main curve was reduced from 51° to 16° and maintained 70% of correction at last follow-up. In the sagittal plane, for patients with hypokyphosis (27 cases < 20°), the average kyphosis angle was significantly improved from 9° to 29° and maintained during follow-up (32°) with a mean gain of 23° (P < 0.0001). Only 1 patient reported hypokyphosis (18°) at last follow-up. For patients with normal kyphosis, the average gain was 8°. Conclusion. In a large consecutive cohort, reduction of scoliosis by ST2R is a simple method that allows 70% of correction in the coronal plane, equivalent to screw instrumentations, and a restoration of normal thoracic kyphosis.


Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2010

Children distal humerus supracondylar fractures: The Blount Method experience

C. V. A. Kinkpe; A.V. Dansokho; M.M. Niane; E. Chau; J. Sales de Gauzy; Jean-Luc Clément; Seydina Issa Laye Seye

INTRODUCTION Extension-type supracondylar fractures of the humerus in children are frequent lesions whose orthopaedic treatment remains under debate in Rigault and Lagrange type III fractures and highly controversial in type IV fractures. The objective of this study was to extend the Blount method to fractures with substantial displacement even in patients presenting significant swelling and to evaluate the results. PATIENTS AND METHODS We conducted a prospective continuous study from December 2005 to August 2007 on 67 children: 49 boys and 18 girls with a mean age of 6 years (range, 3-14 years). The mean time lapsed from consultation to treatment was 30 h. The mean hospital stay was 72 h. In 50 children, the limb was elevated preoperatively for a mean 48 h. The fracture was reduced under fluoroscopy-guided general anesthesia with mask and immobilized with 5-cm cloth banding padded with foam. The follow-up was clinical and radiological. The mean follow-up was 16 months (range, 6-26 months). Assessment followed the 1969 SOFCOT guidelines. RESULTS At union, mean flexion was 124 degrees , the mean extension lag was 26 degrees . At last follow-up, the mean flexion was 146 degrees , the extension lag was 0.5 degrees , and pronation and supination were free. Immediately after surgery, the mean Baumann and anteflexion angles were 75 degrees and 43 degrees , respectively; at union they were 76 degrees and 44 degrees and at follow-up 79 degrees and 42 degrees . We found no vascular or nerve lesions. According to the SOFCOT criteria, at follow-up we obtained 80.6% very good results and 19.4% good results. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Level IV. Therapeutic study.


Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2010

Congenital scoliosis: A frontal plane evaluation of 251 operated patients 14 years old or older at follow-up

M.-L. Louis; J.-M. Gennari; A.-D. Loundou; G. Bollini; M. Bergoin; J.-C. Bernard; B. Biot; C. Bonnard; Jean-Luc Clément; C. Garin; K. Kamoun; G. Kreichati; P. Lascombes; J.-F. Mallet; L. Miladi; J. Sales de Gauzy; V. Topouchian; J.-M. Vital

INTRODUCTION Congenital scoliosis, carrying an incidence between 0.5 and 1 per 1000 births, raise the problem of their evolutive potential. HYPOTHESIS Some predictive factors for the evolution of scoliotic curvature due to congenital vertebral malformation (CVM) can be found. MATERIAL AND METHODS This was a retrospective multicenter study of 251 patients, at least 14 years old when evaluated at end of follow-up, with CVM and spinal deformity predominating in the frontal plane. RESULTS 38.8% of patients showed associated neurologic, visceral or orthopedic abnormalities. CVM was single in 60.6%, double in 20.3%, triple in 6.4% and multiple in 12.7% of cases. 34.1% of CVMs were thoracic. Congenital scoliosis curvature was single in 88.8% of patients, double in 10% and triple in 1.2%. Mean curvature angle was 31.7° at diagnosis (range, 0-105°) and 41.3° preoperatively (range, 10-105°). Sixty-one patients showed associated kyphosis. Mean change in postoperative curvature angle over follow-up was 1.6° (range, -20° to 38°) in the 73 patients managed by arthrodesis, -0.4° (-24° to 30°) in the 64 managed by epiphysiodesis, and 0.4° (-18° to 35°) in the 49 managed by hemivertebral (HV) resection. Results were found to correlate significantly with age at surgery for patients managed by epiphysiodesis, but not for those managed by HV resection or arthrodesis. DISCUSSION More than 30% of congenital scolioses involve associated intraspinal abnormality. All CVM patients should therefore undergo medullary and spinal MRI to assess the CVM in all three planes, and the medullary canal and its content. The evolution of scoliotic curvature induced by CVM is hard to predict. Several factors are to be taken into account: CVM type, number and location, and patient age. Curvature progression may be slow or very fast. It accelerates during the peak of puberty, stabilizing with bone maturity. Surgery is mandatory in evolutive scoliosis. Four procedures may be recommended, according to type of CVM and especially to patient age: arthrodesis, convex epiphysiodesis, HV resection or rib distraction. Surgery seeks to correct the spinal deformity induced by the CVM and prevent compensatory curvature and neurologic complications, while conserving sagittal and frontal spinal balance and sparing as many levels as possible. In case of HV involvement, the procedure of choice is CVM resection, which provides 87.5% good results in this indication; the procedure is relatively safe, conservative of spinal levels, and without age limit. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Level IV. Retrospective study.


Pediatric Radiology | 2008

A case of severe congenital kyphoscoliosis secondary to multiple bilateral thoracic pedicle aplasia

Anne Geoffray; Jean-Luc Clément; Béatrice Leloutre; Marco Albertario; Nancy Béchard-Sevette

A 9-month-old boy with congenital kyphoscoliosis secondary to multiple bilateral thoracic pedicle aplasias is presented. This anomaly has rarely been described in the literature. Plain films showed absence of thoracic pedicles bilaterally from T2 to T9, which was better demonstrated on CT multiplanar and 3-D reformatted images. There were no neurological symptoms even though the deformity progressed rapidly. Congenital kyphosis or kyphoscoliosis is often related to spinal anomalies that are located on the anterior aspect of the vertebrae. However, posterior anomalies may also be responsible and should be recognized before neurological complications occur.


Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2017

Five-year outcomes of the First Distal Uninstrumented Vertebra after posterior fusion for Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis Lenke 1 or 2

Jean-Luc Clément; F. Solla; A. Tran; Christian Morin; Walid Lakhal; J. Sales de Gauzy; J. Leroux; J.-M. Gennari; F.H. Parent; G. Kreichati; S. Wolf; I. Obeid

BACKGROUND Tilt of the First Distal Uninstrumented Vertebra (FDUV) reflects changes in the main curve and compensatory lumbar curve after posterior fusion to treat thoracic Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS). HYPOTHESIS FDUV tilt 5 years or more post-fusion depends chiefly on reduction of the main curve and on other factors such as selection of the last instrumented vertebra. MATERIAL AND METHOD A multicenter retrospective cohort of 182 patients with Lenke 1 or 2 AIS treated with posterior instrumentation and followed up for a mean of 8 years and a minimum of 5 years was studied. The patients were divided into two groups based on whether tilt of the upper endplate of the FDUV was ≤5° or >5°at last follow-up. Variables associated with tilt were identified by multiple logistic regression. RESULTS Six variables were significantly associated with FDUVtilt: percentage of correction at last follow-up, correction loss, lumbar modifier B, number of instrumented vertebrae, inclusion within the instrumentation of the distal neutral vertebra, and inclusion within the instrumentation of the lowest vertebra intersected by the central sacral vertical line. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION The main variables associated with FDUVtilt ≤5° were a final correction percentage ≥60% and absence of correction loss between the postoperative period and last follow-up. Given the stable reduction provided by contemporary instrumentations, we recommend selective thoracic fusion of Lenke 1 or 2 AIS with lumbar modifiers A, B, and C. The lowest instrumented vertebra should be either the neutral vertebra or the vertebra intersected by the central sacral vertical line if it is distal to the neutral vertebra. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE IV Retrospective multicenter study.


Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2018

Can Gartland II and III supracondylar humerus fractures be treated using Blount's method in the emergency room?

Jonathan Thomas; Olivier Rosello; Ioana Oborocianu; Federico Solla; Jean-Luc Clément; Virginie Rampal

BACKGROUND Studies have established that Blounts method is reliable for treating extension supracondylar fractures (SCFs) in paediatric patients. Reduction in the emergency room (ER) under procedural sedation followed by orthopaedic treatment is increasingly used for many fracture types. The primary objective of this study was to determine whether SCF reduction in the ER was feasible, by determining the failure rate. The secondary objective was to identify causes of failure with the goal of improving patient selection to reduction in the ER. HYPOTHESIS Gartland II and III SCFs (Lagrange-Rigault grades 2-4) can be treated in the emergency room under fluoroscopic guidance and with procedural sedation. MATERIAL AND METHODS A retrospective study was conducted in 128 paediatric patients who underwent ER reduction of an SCF in 2014-2015. Mean age was 5.6 years. Reduction was performed either by an orthopaedic surgery resident or by a specially trained emergency physician. RESULTS Of the 128 SCFs, 101 (79%) were Gartland II and 27 Gartland III. In the Lagrange-Rigault classification, 55 (43%) fractures were grade 2, 59 (46%) were grade 3, and 14 (11%) were grade 4. The arm was immobilised using the cuff-and-collar method described by Blount for 4 weeks. All 128 fractures healed without delay. Blounts method alone was effective in 112 (87.5%) patients. Of the 16 other patients, 15 (Lagrange-Rigault 3, n=14; and 4, n=1) had an unstable fracture after ER reduction and were managed by reduction and internal fixation in the operating room. The remaining patient (0.5%) experienced secondary displacement requiring revision surgery in the operating room. CONCLUSION SCFs grades 2 to 4 in the Lagrange-Rigault classification (Gartland II and III) can be treated in the ER by specially trained physicians. Lagrange-Rigault grade 3/Gartland III SCFs are more likely to require subsequent internal fixation but do not contraindicate reduction in the ER. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE IV, retrospective study.


Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2018

Cobalt-chrome and titanium alloy rods provide similar coronal and sagittal correction in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis

Yann Sabah; Jean-Luc Clément; Federico Solla; Olivier Rosello; Virginie Rampal

BACKGROUND Cobalt-chrome (CoCr) and the titanium alloy TA6V (Ti) are the materials most widely used for spinal instrumentations in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). The objective of this work was to compare the effectiveness of CoCr and Ti rods in terms of coronal and sagittal correction by pedicle screw constructs in patients with AIS. HYPOTHESIS Correction is similar with CoCr and Ti rods in patients with AIS. MATERIAL AND METHOD A retrospective single surgeon study was conducted in patients with AIS managed using pedicle screw posterior spinal fusion with high implant density and reduction by postero-medial translation. Follow-up was more than 2 years in all patients. Patients were divided into two groups based on whether the rods used were made of CoCr (n=30) or Ti (n=33). The groups were identical for age, Risser classification, follow-up duration, type of curve, and implant density. Coronal and sagittal parameters on standing full-spine radiographs were analysed using graphics software before surgery then 1 month after surgery and at last follow-up. Quantitative data were compared by applying Students t test. RESULTS The percentage of main curve correction at last follow-up was the same in the two groups (76%/75%) (p=0.7). Gains in thoracic kyphosis (12°/13°) and lumbar lordosis (8°/10°) were not significantly different between groups. At last follow-up, 3 patients had proximal junctional kyphosis, 1 in the CoCr group and 2 in the Ti group (p=0.6). CONCLUSION For posterior spinal fusion to treat AIS, with a high density of pedicle screws, correction by translation, and 6 mm rods, CoCr rods and Ti rods produce the same amount of coronal and sagittal correction. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE IV, comparative retrospective study with no control group.


Hip International | 2018

Advanced containment methods for Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease: triple pelvic osteotomy versus Chiari osteotomy

Olivier Rosello; Federico Solla; Ioana Oborocianu; Edouard Chau; Tony ElHayek; Jean-Luc Clément; Virginie Rampal

Introduction: The goal of intervention in Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease (LCPD) is to prevent femoral head deformation by containing the head within the acetabulum. Currently, surgical containment methods are the mainstay of treatment, and pelvic osteotomies have been shown to be successful. They include triple pelvic osteotomy (TPO), Salter osteotomy, Chiari osteotomy and shelf procedure. The purpose of this study was to compare clinical and radiologic results for Chiari osteotomy and TPO in LCPD. Methods: 29 children treated between 1980 and 2010 for LCPD in 2 centres were reviewed. 19 underwent TPO, and 10, Chiari osteotomy. Two independent observers assessed sequential radiographs and medical data. Each hip was preoperatively classed by clinical data, Catteral, Herring and Salter-Thompson classification, centre-edge angle (CE), and acetabular index (AI). The 2 groups were first tested for their comparability. After surgery the hips were classified by Stulberg classification, CE, AI, Harris Hip Score (HHS) and performance of further surgery. Chiari osteotomy and TPO have been secondary compared on these data by Wilcoxon test. Results: Average follow-up was 4.2 years. The 2 groups were comparable before surgery. At first and last follow-up examination, statistically significantly superior results in patients with TPO regarding Stulberg classification (p = 0.01), AI (p = 0.002), pain (p = 0.02) and function (p = 0.01) in the HHS score were found. No differences were noticed concerning CE angle. Conclusions: In our series, TPO provided better radiologic and clinical outcomes compared to Chiari osteotomy, specially concerning the final Stulberg classification. We concluded that TPO should be preferred when indicated.

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Federico Solla

Boston Children's Hospital

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Olivier Rosello

Boston Children's Hospital

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Virginie Rampal

Arts et Métiers ParisTech

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Anne Geoffray

Boston Children's Hospital

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J. Sales de Gauzy

Boston Children's Hospital

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A.V. Dansokho

Cheikh Anta Diop University

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M.M. Niane

Cheikh Anta Diop University

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G. Bollini

Boston Children's Hospital

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