High cord signals on magnetic resonance and other factors predict poor outcomes of cervical spine surgery: A review.
Surg Neurol Int. 2018;9:13
Authors: Epstein NE
Abstract
Background: High cord signals (HCS) on preoperative/postoperative T1, T1 gadolinium-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (Gd-DTPA), and T2 magnetic resonance (MR) studies, postoperative failure of HCS to regress and/or cord re-expansion, and a triangular cord configuration are poor prognostic factors for surgical patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM).
Methods: Here, we reviewed the negative prognostic import of high Grades/Types and more extensive locations of preoperative/postoperative HCS on T1, T1 Gd-DTPA, and T2 MR studies in surgical patients with CSM. Additional predictors of poor operative outcomes included postoperative failure of HCS to regress, cord re-expansion at the site of a HCS, and the triangular vs. teardrop or boomerang cord configuration. The Types/Grades of HCS on MR follow:Type/Grade 0 - no/absent signal changes; Type/Grade 1 - mild/light/fuzzy/obscure/low cord signal (LCS) changes; Type/Grade 2 - sharp/intense/well-defined HCS; and Type/Grade 3 - mixed/HCS. The definitions of location/extent of LCS/HCS were: focal (1 level), multifocal (with skip areas), and multisegmental (continuous over >1 segment), while cord configuration was categorized as triangular, teardrop, or boomerang.
Results: On MR studies, preoperative/postoperative Types/Grades 0-1 changes correlated with better prognoses (e.g., improved Japanese Orthopedic Association (JOA) scores or Nurick Grades), while Types/Grades 2-3 correlated with poorer outcomes. Multiple poor prognostic indicators also included; failure of postoperative HCS on MR to regress (particularly if multisegmental), postoperative cord re-expansion at the site of a prior HCS, and triangular cord configuration.
Conclusions: Grade/Types 2-3 HCS on T1, T1 Gd-DTPA, and T2-weighted MR images on preoperative/postoperative MR studies, failure of HCS to regress (multisegmental), cord re-expansion at the site of a prior HCS, and a triangular cord configuration (atrophy) all contributed to poorer outcomes for CSM surgery.
PMID: 29416910 [PubMed]
http://ift.tt/2nSTYUH
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου