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8714

Effect of Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion Compared to Cervical Arthroplasty on Dynamics of Adjacent Segment Disease

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Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Background Data: After anterior cervical discectomy; the effect of cervical fusion or cervical arthroplasty on the dynamics of adjacent segments and the overall cervical spine has a direct impact on the final clinical outcome
Purpose: To compare the effect of the cervical fusion (ACDF) versus arthroplasty after anterior cervical discectomy on the cervical dynamics, this can predispose to adjacent segment diseases at those levels.
Study Design: A comparative retrospective study between two groups; cervical arthroplasty group, and the cervical fusion group.
Patients and Methods: A total of 36 consecutive patients underwent anterior cervical discectomy with a mean follow-up of 24 months. Patients were classified into two groups; Group I (20 patients) were operated for (ACDF), Group II (16 patients) were operated for anterior cervical discectomy and prosthesis (arthroplasty). Preoperative and postoperative clinical assessments were done by using the Neck Disability Index (NDI) and the Japanese Orthopedic Association (JOA) score for myelopathy patients. In all patients, at final follow-up, a neuro-radiographic assessment (cervical spine static and dynamic x-ray and MRI) was done. The angle of the operated disc level, the angle of above and below adjacent segments and their range of motion (ROM), and global cervical curve Cobb angle (C2-7) were measured.
Results: In group I; the mean angle of the global cervical curve improved from 3.4° preoperative (kyphosis) to 14.5°postoperative (P<0.001), where in group II, angle improved from 4.6° to 16.5° (P=0.6). The mean segmental ROM of adjacent segments didn't show significant instability. The mean ROM at upper adjacent levels was 11.1°, and at the lower adjacent levels was 10.2° (normally up to 10 degrees). In group II, however, the mean angle of ROM was 7.8° at upper adjacent levels and 9.6° at lower adjacent levels. Postoperative improvement of JOA and NDI scores was statistically significant (P<0.001) in group-I (JOA improved from14.3±1.25 to 16.6±0.9, and NDI improved from 21.1±5.8 to 7.63±4.9), where in group-II JOA improved from 15.7±1.2 to 16.2±1.1 and NDI improved from 19±2.1 to 16±8.7. Symptomatic ASD was observed in 5 patients (20%) in group I and in none of group II patients
Conclusion: Compensatory increase in ROM of the contiguous adjacent segments in patients subjected to ACDF may lead to ASD especially in those with asymptomatic adjacent sub-clinical degenerative disease. In contrary, arthroplasty reduce the incidence of adjacent segment diseases. (2017ESJ147)

DOI

10.21608/esj.2017.8714

Keywords

cervical dynamics, adjacent segment diseases, anterior cervical discectomy, cervical prosthesis, anterior cervical fusion

Authors

First Name

Ahmed

Last Name

Elsawaf

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Department of Neurosurgery, Faculty of Medicine, Suez Canal University, Ismailia, Egypt.

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Salem

Last Name

Faisal

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Department of Neurosurgery, Faculty of Medicine, Suez Canal University, Ismailia, Egypt.

Email

salimfaisal71@yahoo.com

City

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Orcid

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First Name

Mohamed

Last Name

Hasanin

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Department of Neurosurgery, Faculty of Medicine, Suez Canal University, Ismailia, Egypt

Email

mhmdhasanin@yahoo.com

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

25

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

1677

Issue Date

2018-01-01

Receive Date

2017-06-01

Publish Date

2018-01-01

Page Start

36

Page End

46

Print ISSN

2314-8950

Online ISSN

2314-8969

Link

https://esj.journals.ekb.eg/article_8714.html

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https://esj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=8714

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4

Type

Original Article

Type Code

432

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Spine Journal

Publication Link

https://esj.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023