The London Spine Unit : best situated spine facility in UKPublished articleCONCLUSIONS: This study revealed that cervical disc replacement cannot maintain the intervertebral disc height obtained immediately after surgery. There is no obvious correlation between the change in intervertebral space height and clinical efficacy in the early postoperative stage. Nonetheless, the intervertebral disc height may affect the NDI index 1 year after surgery. If the postoperative intervertebral space height change can be maintained at 2-4 mm at 1 year, satisfactory ROM,…Cervical Disc Replacement Expert. Best Spinal Surgeon UKThe London Spine Unit is a specialist clinic for Cervical Disc Replacement as Day Surgery.
Abstract
Methods: In this study, the height variation and general trend of postoperative ISH in all patients were analyzed. The patients were divided into 3 groups based on the change of postoperative intervertebral space height (ISH)-group A (ISH <2 mm), group B (ISH 2-4 mm), and group C (ISH >4mm)-and the clinical and radiographic results compared among the 3 groups.
Results: A total of 120 consecutive patients with symptomatic cervical disc disease were included in this study. The results showed that the mean ISH increased significantly from 0.729 mm before surgery to 1.143 mm at 1 week, then gradually decreased to 1.032 mm at 3 months, 0.980 mm at 6 months, 0.760 mm at one year, and 0.750 mm at the final follow-up. The average postoperative Neck Disability Index (NDI) was 19.73 ± 0.81, 13.74 ± 4.94, 17.19 ± 4.22, respectively, in the 3 groups at 1 year after surgery and the average range of motion (ROM) was 5.44° ± 3.85° in group A, 9.34° ± 4.38° in group B, and 6.51° ± 4.38° in group C. The mean diameter of the intervertebral foramen was 6.54 ± 1.86 mm in group A, 9.63 ± 2.38 mm in group B, and 9.31 ± 1.68 mm in group C. Degeneration at the superiorly adjacent disc level was observed in 13.51% patients in group A, 9.37% in group B, and 21.05% in group C. Degeneration at the inferiorly adjacent level was radiographically identified in 21.62% in group A, 14.06% in group B, and 26.32% in group C.
Conclusions: This study revealed that cervical disc replacement cannot maintain the intervertebral disc height obtained immediately after surgery. There is no obvious correlation between the change in intervertebral space height and clinical efficacy in the early postoperative stage. Nonetheless, the intervertebral disc height may affect the NDI index 1 year after surgery. If the postoperative intervertebral space height change can be maintained at 2-4 mm at 1 year, satisfactory ROM, intervertebral foramen diameter, and relatively low adjacent segment degeneration may be obtained after cervical disc replacement.
Keywords: Adjacent segment degeneration; Cervical disc replacement; Cervical spine; Clinical outcomes; Intervertebral space height.
The London Spine Unit : best situated spine facility in UKRead the original publication from Pubmed : Effect of Changes in Postoperative Intervertebral Space Height on Clinical and Radiological Outcomes After Cervical Disc Replacement