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The recovery of motor strength after posterior percutaneous endoscopic cervical foraminotomy and discectomy.
World Neurosurg. 2018 Apr 21;:
Authors: Lee U, Kim CH, Chung CK, Choi Y, Yang SH, Park SB, Hwang SH, Jung JM, Kim KT
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Cervical radiculopathy infrequently presents with motor weakness. Motor weakness was improved in >90% of patients after anterior cervical discectomy and fusion or posterior cervical foraminotomy. Posterior percutaneous endoscopic cervical foraminotomy and discectomy (PECF) is an alternative surgical technique, but the outcome of motor weakness has not been reported. The objective was to demonstrate the longitudinal outcomes of motor weakness following PECF.
METHODS: A retrospective review of 106 consecutive patients was performed. Preoperative motor weakness was graded as mild (IV/V strength) or severe (less than III/V strength). The patients visited the outpatient clinic at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after surgery and yearly thereafter. Improvement was defined as an improved weakness of more than one grade, and normalization was defined as the recovery of complete motor strength.
RESULTS: Motor weakness preoperatively presented in 76/106 (72%) patients (49%, mild weakness; 23%, severe weakness). After PECF, the weakness improved in 72/76 (95%) patients and normalized in 65/76 (86%) patients. In the patients with mild weakness, the normalization rates were 48%, 81%, 90% and 96% at postoperative months 1, 3, 6 and 12, respectively. In the patients with severe weakness, the improvement rates were 50%, 71%, 83%, 88% and 92%, and the normalization rates were 8%, 38%, 58%, 58% and 63% at postoperative months 1, 3, 6, 12 and 24, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Preoperative motor weakness was improved in 95% of the patients after PECF, but motor weakness was not normalized in 37% of the patients with severe weakness.
PMID: 29689395 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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