1 / 23

Posterior surgery for Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy Mehmet Zileli , M.D.

Posterior surgery for Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy Mehmet Zileli , M.D. Izmir - Turkey. CSM Posterior Decompression. Indications Posterior compression >2 level anterior compression Hyperlordosis Contraindications Kyphosis 1-2 level anterior compression.

rvelez
Download Presentation

Posterior surgery for Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy Mehmet Zileli , M.D.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Posterior surgery for Cervical Spondylotic MyelopathyMehmet Zileli, M.D. Izmir - Turkey

  2. CSM Posterior Decompression • Indications • Posterior compression • >2 level anterior compression • Hyperlordosis • Contraindications • Kyphosis • 1-2 level anterior compression

  3. Anterior vs Posterior Surgery?Decision Making 1-Site of compression 2-Cervical curve 3-Number of compressions 4-Patient’s general condition, bone quality

  4. Anterior vs Posterior Surgery?Importance of Site of Compression Anterior compression • Anterior surgery Posterior compression • Posterior surgery Anterior & posterior compression • ??? • The number of levels ? • Instability ?

  5. Anterior vs Posterior Surgery?Importance of Curve • Kyphotic curve • Anterior surgery • Multiple levels ?? • Hyperlordotic curve • Posterior surgery • Lordosis preserved - lost • ???

  6. Anterior vs Posterior Surgery?Patient’s age, general condition, bone quality • Age is not a factor alone • Graft problems if osteoporotic • Poor general condition • Posterior surgery > Anterior surgery

  7. Complications of Anterior Surgeryappr. 20-25% 1-Neurological complications 2-Cervical site compl. Airway problems Hematom Esophageal injury Vascular Hoarseness Dysphagia Chylothorax 3-Graft related compl. Graft dislocation Pseudarthrosis Adjacent level degeneration Plate & screw problems 4-Graft site compl.

  8. CSM: Posterior Surgery Advantages 1-Very good technique for decompression of structures from posterior such as ligamentum flavum hypertrophy. Disadvantages 1-Increasing instability resulting in osteophyte formation 2-Hard discs and anterior osteophytes are not possible to remove, if attempted, it would cause root injury 3-Neurological complications are more in comparison to anterior surgery

  9. Posterior SurgeryAbsolute Indications 44 y.o. male, quadriparesis for 5-6 yrs, gait disturbance for 1 yr, sphincter disturbancePosterior compression only > posterior surgery

  10. Posterior SurgeryAbsolute Indications 79 y.o. Female, walking disturbance for years. Inability to walk for 1 month, wheel-chair dependent. MRI: severe anterior and posteriorcompression at C3-4. Coronary artery disease, high risk for cardiac reasons

  11. Posterior SurgeryRelative Indications 72 y.o. Male. Tetraparesisi prominent on right side for 1 year. MRI C4-5-6-7 severe narrowing T2 hyperintensity , lordoticcurve.

  12. C4-5-6 laminectomy, lateral mass plate

  13. 3 levels anterior-posterior compression, lordosis is preserved > posterior surgery Postop MRI

  14. CSM: Posterior Surgery Laminectomy & Fusion Lateral mass fixation Laminoplasty Hemilateral opening Bilateral opening

  15. Laminectomy & Fusion Lateral mass fixation

  16. Laminoplasty • Unilateral opening • Bilateral opening

  17. Laminoplasty

  18. Laminectomy or Laminoplasty? Laminectomy Causes instability Laminectomy membrane Laminoplasty Technically demanding Restricted neck movements Insufficient decompression?

  19. OutcomeAnterior vs Posterior • Success rates range between 70-85% in different series • Duration of symptoms are important

  20. ComplicationsAnterior vs Posterior • Functional outcomes similar • But complications greater with corpectomy Yonenobu, et. al. – Spine, 1992 Heller, et. al. – Spine, 2001 Wada, et. al. – Spine, 2001 Edwards, et.al. – Spine, 2002

  21. Conclusions For multi-level anteriorcompression < 2 Levels Multi-level ACDF 2 Levels Corpectomy >2 Levels Laminectomy or Laminoplasty For multi-level diffuse (e.g. congenital) compression • No Kyphosis Laminoplasty or corpectomy • Kyphosis Corpectomy

  22. Conclusions • With proper indications, results comparable with either corpectomy or laminectomy / laminaplasty • Higher complication rate with corpectomy

  23. CSM Posterior Decompression • Indications • Posterior compression • >2 level anterior compression • Hyperlordosis • Contraindications • Kyphosis • 1-2 level anterior compression

More Related