Instrumented open-door laminoplasty as treatment for cervical myelopathy in 104 patients.

Autor: Dimar JR 2nd; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY 40202, USA., Bratcher KR, Brock DC, Glassman SD, Campbell MJ, Carreon LY
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: American journal of orthopedics (Belle Mead, N.J.) [Am J Orthop (Belle Mead NJ)] 2009 Jul; Vol. 38 (7), pp. E123-8.
Abstrakt: Treatment of multilevel cervical myelopathy remains a challenge. We report on a large series of cervical myelopathy patients treated with instrumented open-door laminoplasty. We retrospectively examined the medical records of 104 patients who had undergone instrumented open-door laminoplasty (titanium plate) for cervical myelopathy (minimum follow-up, 24 months). All patients had been myelopathic, 57 (54.8%) had stenosis, 39 (37.5%) had spondylosis, 66 (63.5%) reported gait disturbance, 18 (17.3%) had handwriting changes, 33 (31.7%) complained of deterioration of dexterity, 56 (53.8%) had grasp weakness, 7 (6.7%) had bowel and bladder complaints, 27 (26.0%) had a positive Hoffmann sign, 10 (9.6%) had sustained clonus, and 10 (9.6%) had a positive Babinski sign. Mean preoperative-to-postoperative improvement in Nurick grade was 1.47. Complications included 4 nerve root injuries (3.8%), 1 of which (at C5) was permanent, and 1 transient neurologic deterioration (<1%), 1 incidental durotomy (<1%), and 5 wound infections (4.8%). Four patients required anterior revision for persistent symptoms. Open-door laminoplasty with miniplate instrumentation is an effective, safe method for preventing progression of myelopathy with multilevel involvement while alleviating the need for multilevel fusion.
Databáze: MEDLINE