9 results on '"ANTERIOR CERVICAL DISKECTOMY"'
Search Results
2. Extraforaminal Vertebral Artery Anomalies and Their Associated Surgical Implications: An Epidemiologic and Anatomic Report on 1000 Patients.
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Zhang, Michael, Dayani, Fara, Purger, David A., Cage, Tene, Lee, Marco, Patel, Mahesh, and Singh, Harminder
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VERTEBRAL artery , *CERVICAL vertebrae , *SPINAL surgery , *COMPUTED tomography , *LATERAL dominance - Abstract
Extraforaminal vertebral anomalies involve entry at cervical transverse foramina other than at C6 and can appear with other anatomic variations along the V2 segment. Such unexpected vessel courses can have implications on surgical planning. We sought to evaluate the incidence of anomalous V2 segment entries, as well as their associations with vessel dominance, medialization, and C7 pedicle width. We conducted a retrospective study on 1000 consecutive computed tomography angiograms, documenting level and laterality of vessel of entry, as well as vertebral dominance patterns. Patients with rostral C4 anomalies were assessed for medialization. The pedicle widths ipsilateral to caudal C7 anomalies were compared with those of contralateral and matched controls. A total of 157 patients were identified with extraforaminal entries, with 25 having bilateral findings. The most common alternative entry was at C5 (70.3%), followed by C4 (17.6%) and C7 (11.5%). Among patients with unilateral anomalies, there was an increased representation of contralateral vertebral dominance, relative to ipsilateral dominance (79.6% vs 20.4%, P < 0.0001). Among anomalous C4 entries, vertebral medialization was seen along the right (35%) and left sides (23.1%) spanning C6-T1. Among C7 anomalous entries there was no statistical difference in pedicle width. Extraforaminal anomalies may be more frequent than previously reported and are important considerations during subaxial cervical spine surgery planning. Particular attention should be paid to the contralateral dominance pattern within this subgroup. In patients with anomalous V2 segment entries, adherence to the standard, anatomic landmarks remains desirable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. Anterior Cervical Fusion with Stand-alone Trabecular Metal Cages to Treat Cervical Myelopathy Caused by Degenerative Disk Disease. Observations in 88 Cases with Minimum 12-month Follow-up.
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Mastronardi, Luciano, Roperto, Raffaelino, Cacciotti, Guglielmo, and Calvosa, Francesco
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CANCELLOUS bone , *SPINAL cord diseases , *BONE growth , *INTERVERTEBRAL disk prostheses , *RADICULOPATHY - Abstract
Background Anterior cervical fusion (ACF) with autologous bone was reported > 50 years ago. The continuous development of materials with elastic properties close to that of the cortical bone improves induction of osteogenesis and simplifies the technique of interbody fusion. To determine the safety and efficiency of stand-alone trabecular metal (TM) (or porous tantalum) cages for ACF, we performed a retrospective analysis of 88 consecutive patients with one-level or two-level degenerative disk disease (DDD) causing cervicalmyelopathy treated by interbody fusion with stand-alone TMcages. Materials and Methods During a 65-month period, 88 consecutive patients had ACF at 105 levels between C3 and C7. All surgeries involved one- or two-segmental DDD producing mild or severe cervical spine myelopathy, in 31 patients (35.2%), associated with unilateral or bilateral radiculopathy. We implanted all disk spaces with unfilled TM trapezoidal cages (Zimmer Biomet Spine, Broomfield, Colorado, United States). Results At a mean follow-up of 31 months (range: 12-65 months), 95.4% of patients had a good to excellent outcome, with subjective and objective improvement of myelopathy; the result was fair in two and poor in two other patients. Radicular pain and/or any deficits disappeared in 84 patients (95.4%) complaining of preoperative myeloradiculopathy. The fusion rate was 68.2% at 6 months and 100% at 1 year. Device fragmentation was never observed. In two cases, a second operation with removal of TM cages, corpectomy, expansion cages, and plating was necessary. Conclusions TM cages appear to be safe and efficient for ACF in DDD patients with myelopathy. To confirm our preliminary impressions, larger studies with long-term follow-up are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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4. Does Workers’ Compensation Status Affect Outcomes after Lumbar Spine Surgery? : A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Russo, Fabrizio, De Salvatore, Sergio, Ambrosio, Luca, Vadalà, Gianluca, Fontana, Luca, Papalia, Rocco, Rantanen, Jorma, Iavicoli, Sergio, Denaro, Vincenzo, Clinicum, and Department of Public Health
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INTERBODY FUSION ,DISABILITY ,lumbar decompression ,satisfaction ,return to work ,3142 Public health care science, environmental and occupational health ,lumbar fusion ,BACK-PAIN ,SURGICAL-TREATMENT ,INJURY SEVERITY ,RETURN-TO-WORK ,occupational health ,POSTEROLATERAL FUSION ,pain ,ANTERIOR CERVICAL DISKECTOMY ,musculoskeletal disorders ,PREDICTORS ,COSTS ,low back pain ,insurance - Abstract
Low back pain (LBP) is currently the leading cause of disability worldwide and the mostcommon reason for workers’ compensation (WC) claims. Studies have demonstrated that receivingWC is associated with a negative prognosis following treatment for a vast range of health conditions.However, the impact of WC on outcomes after spine surgery is still controversial. The aim of thismeta-analysis was to systematically review the literature and analyze the impact of compensationstatus on outcomes after lumbar spine surgery. A systematic search was performed on Medline,Scopus, CINAHL, EMBASE and CENTRAL databases. The review included studies of patientsundergoing lumbar spine surgery in which compensation status was reported. Methodologicalquality was assessed through ROBINS-I and quality of evidence was estimated using the GRADErating. A total of 26 studies with a total of 2668 patients were included in the analysis. WC patientshad higher post-operative pain and disability, as well as lower satisfaction after surgery whencompared to those without WC. Furthermore, WC patients demonstrated to have a delayed return towork. According to our results, compensation status is associated with poor outcomes after lumbarspine surgery. Contextualizing post-operative outcomes in clinical and work-related domains helpsunderstand the multifactorial nature of the phenomenon.
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- 2021
5. Young adults undergoing ACDF surgery exhibit decreased health-related quality of life in the long term in comparison to the general population
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Jari Siironen, Tuomas Hirvonen, Johan Marjamaa, Mika Niemelä, Anniina Koski-Palkén, Seppo Koskinen, Neurokirurgian yksikkö, HUS Neurocenter, Department of Neurosciences, Clinicum, and HUS Helsinki and Uusimaa Hospital District
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Anterior decompression ,General Population Cohort ,Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion ,Intervertebral Disc Degeneration ,DISEASE ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,FUSION ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Cervical disc herniation ,medicine ,Cervical spondylosis ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,ANTERIOR CERVICAL DISKECTOMY ,Young adult ,education ,Finland ,Retrospective Studies ,030222 orthopedics ,education.field_of_study ,AUTOLOGOUS ILIAC CREST ,business.industry ,3112 Neurosciences ,Retrospective cohort study ,3126 Surgery, anesthesiology, intensive care, radiology ,medicine.disease ,Long-term outcome ,3. Good health ,Surgery ,Spinal Fusion ,Treatment Outcome ,SMITH-ROBINSON PROCEDURE ,Cohort ,Cervical Vertebrae ,Quality of Life ,Neurology (clinical) ,FOLLOW-UP ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Diskectomy ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND CONTEXT: The leading surgical treatment of cervical radiculopathy is anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF). However, it has been suggested that ACDF procedures could lead to accelerated degeneration of the adjacent cervical discs (adjacent segment disease, or ASD) and the effect of ACDF surgery on neck symptoms and quality of life in the long term is not fully understood. Patients operated on at young ages generally have a long life expectancy and a long number of working years ahead of them. Thus, this patient group is of special interest when considering the accumulation of cervical problems due to possible ASD, the overall progressive nature of cervical degeneration in the long term, and their effects on related quality of life. PURPOSE: Our goal was to study the health-related quality of life in the long-term follow-up after ACDF surgery in the young adult population between the ages of 18 and 40. STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective cohort study with propensity matched controls. PATIENT SAMPLE: All patients between 18 and 40 years of age at the time of the surgery who underwent ACDF due to degenerative cervical disease at Helsinki University Hospital between the years 1990 and 2005 who had filled in the quality of life questionnaires 12 to 28 years after the surgery (281 patients), and a propensity matched control cohort of the general population selected based on age, sex, and smoking status. OUTCOME MEASURES: Quality of life measured by the EuroQol questionnaire (EQ-5D-3L and EQ-VAS). METHODS: The medical records of all patients who underwent ACDF due to degenerative cervical disease at the age of 18 to 40 years at Helsinki University Hospital between 1990 and 2005 were analyzed retrospectively. The EuroQol questionnaire was sent to all patients whose contact information could be obtained (443 patients) at the end of the follow-up (median 17.5 years) to assess their current quality of life. A total of 281 patients returned the questionnaires and were included in this study. Quality of life was compared to that in the general Finnish population using a similar sized control cohort selected through propensity matching. RESULTS: The patients who had undergone ACDF surgery reported significantly more problems than the general population cohort in three out of five dimensions that were assessed in the EQ-5D questionnaire, including mobility, usual activities, and pain/discomfort. Similarly, the overall EQ-5D-3L index calculated from the dimensional values was lower (0.74 vs. 0.83, p=.000), depicting a generally decreased health-related quality of life among patients. Spondylosis as a primary diagnosis, clinical myelopathy, and further cervical surgeries were associated with lower quality of life in the subgroup analyses of the patients. Similarly, in the EQ-VAS assessment, patient subgroups with spondylosis as a primary diagnosis, at least one reoperation, operation on more than one level, and clinical myelopathy were associated with lower scores and lower quality of life. The mean EQ-VAS score among patients was 73%. Regardless of the decreased health-related quality of life, there was no statistically significant difference in the concurrent employment status between the patient and control groups. CONCLUSIONS: The health-related life quality measured by the EQ-5D-3L was lower in the patient population than in the general population. Patients had more problems with mobility and usual activities and more pain/discomfort. However, satisfaction with the surgery was very high, and there was no significant difference in employment status between the patients and the control population. Patients with spondylosis as a primary diagnosis had lower quality of life compared to patients with disc herniation. Also, clinical myelopathy and further cervical surgeries during follow-up were associated with lower quality of life in the subgroup analyses of the patients. It must also be kept in mind that we do not know what the situation could have been without surgery and with conservative treatment only. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.
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- 2020
6. Dysphagia After Anterior Cervical Spine Surgery: Incidence and Risk Factors
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Kalb, Samuel, Reis, Marco T., Cowperthwaite, Matthew C., Fox, Douglas J., Lefevre, Richard, Theodore, Nicholas, Papadopoulos, Stephen M., and Sonntag, Volker K.H.
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DEGLUTITION disorders , *CERVICAL vertebrae , *SPINAL surgery , *RISK assessment , *MEDICAL care , *SMOKING , *PATHOLOGY , *NEUROSURGERY - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate risk factors for the development of dysphagia after anterior cervical surgery. Methods: The records of 249 patients who underwent anterior cervical surgery were reviewed. The presence and severity of dysphagia were assessed with the Dysphagia Disability Index 6 weeks and 3, 6, and 12 months after surgery. Age; sex; ethnicity; cigarette smoking; previous cervical surgeries; reoperation for same pathology; type of procedure, incision, and instrumentation; number and levels involved; side of procedure, length of surgery; and use of postoperative bracing were analyzed. Results: During the first 6 months after surgery, 27 (10.8%) patients developed dysphagia. From these patients the presence of dysphagia at 6 weeks and at 3 and 6 months was 88.8%, 29.6%, and 7.4%, respectively. By 12 months, dysphagia had resolved in all cases. The mean age of patients with dysphagia was 55 years (SD 12.98) and 50 years (SD 12.07) in patients without dysphagia (P = 0.05). Dysphagic patients had an average of 2.2 (SD 1.15) levels operated compared with 1.84 (SD 0.950) in nondysphagic patients (P = 0.05). Patients who developed dysphagia were most often treated at C4-5 (67%) and C5-6 (81%: P < 0.001). Although mean operative time was slightly longer in patients with dysphagia (186 minutes) compared with those without (169 minutes), the difference was not significant. Conclusions: In our patients, the incidence of dysphagia was low, and it had completely resolved at 12 months in all cases. Risk factors for dysphagia were multilevel procedures, involvement of C4-5 and C5-6, and age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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7. Effects of anterior contralateral cervical microdiskectomy on radiological and clinical outcome
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Çavuşoğlu, Halit, Türkmenoğlu, Osman, Kaya, Ramazan Alper, Can, Songül Meltem, and Aydin, Yunus
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KYPHOSIS , *CERVICAL vertebrae , *DISCECTOMY , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Abstract: Background: We have conducted a prospective study to investigate the relationship between cervical spine alignment and clinical outcome in 102 patients undergoing anterior contralateral microdiskectomy without interbody graft or cage. Methods: Preoperative and postoperative lateral cervical radiographs were obtained, and curvature of the surgically treated spinal segments and the overall curvature of the cervical spine were evaluated in all patients. Clinical outcomes were assessed using the NDI and SF-36. Results: There was no significant change in the mean overall cervical curvature (C2-C7) angles postoperatively in late follow-up findings (P = .72). It represented a statistically significant mean loss of 2.73° of segmental lordosis (P < .0001). The NDI scores decreased significantly in both early and late follow-up evaluations, and the SF-36 scores demonstrated significant improvement in late follow-up results in our series. Analysis of clinical outcome showed no statistical differences between patients with segmental lordosis or kyphosis. Conclusion: Despite the kyphosis seen at the treated levels, the overall alignment between C2 and C7 did not change significantly, indicating that the untreated segments of the cervical spine were compensating for focal kyphosis. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2006
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8. Postoperative Shingles Mimicking Recurrent Radiculopathy after Anterior Cervical Diskectomy and Fusion
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Jason T. Montgomery, Alpesh A. Patel, Darrel S. Brodke, and Brandon D. Lawrence
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Decompression ,business.industry ,Postherpetic neuralgia ,medicine.disease ,Rash ,Article ,Surgery ,anterior cervical diskectomy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Dermatome ,Cervical diskectomy ,Cervical Nerve ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Differential diagnosis ,business ,shingles ,radiculopathy ,Shingles - Abstract
Study Design Case report and review of literature. Objective To report the case of a 67-year-old woman who developed delayed onset (6 months) of symptomatic shingles after cervical nerve root decompression in a previously symptomatic dermatome. Methods The patient's clinic course and outcomes were retrospectively reviewed. The study required no outside funding. The study authors have no financial interest in any of the products or techniques discussed. Results The patient received definitive treatment for shingles once the zoster form rash manifested. The patient, however, developed postherpetic neuralgia and remained symptomatic at her 2-year postoperative visit. Conclusions Although shingles is a common disease state affecting patients in the fifth and sixth decades of life, it is rarely seen in the setting of cervical nerve root decompression. This case demonstrates the need to include shingles on the differential diagnosis of recurrent neurogenic pain after anterior cervical decompression and fusion.
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- 2015
9. Postoperative Shingles Mimicking Recurrent Radiculopathy after Anterior Cervical Diskectomy and Fusion.
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Montgomery JT, Lawrence BD, Brodke DS, and Patel AA
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Study Design Case report and review of literature. Objective To report the case of a 67-year-old woman who developed delayed onset (6 months) of symptomatic shingles after cervical nerve root decompression in a previously symptomatic dermatome. Methods The patient's clinic course and outcomes were retrospectively reviewed. The study required no outside funding. The study authors have no financial interest in any of the products or techniques discussed. Results The patient received definitive treatment for shingles once the zoster form rash manifested. The patient, however, developed postherpetic neuralgia and remained symptomatic at her 2-year postoperative visit. Conclusions Although shingles is a common disease state affecting patients in the fifth and sixth decades of life, it is rarely seen in the setting of cervical nerve root decompression. This case demonstrates the need to include shingles on the differential diagnosis of recurrent neurogenic pain after anterior cervical decompression and fusion.
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- 2015
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