Surgical management of intractable spasticity.

Eur Spine J

Neurosurgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University, Zagazig, Egypt.

Published: March 2016

Background: Spasticity is motor disorder characterized by a velocity-dependent increase in tonic stretch reflexes (muscle tone) with exaggerated tendon jerks, resulting from hyper-excitability of the stretch reflex, as one component of the upper motor neuron syndrome.

Purpose: This study aimed at comparing between spinally based (dorsal rhizotomy) versus peripherally based (selective neurotomy) surgical procedures in management of hypertonia in the lower limbs of pediatrics.

Methods: Over a 3-year period, 50 children with intractable, lower limb spasticity were prospectively treated by selective neurotomy (group A, 35 patients) and dorsal rhizotomy (group B, 15 patients) with 6 months' follow-up period.

Results: The operative duration was longer with dorsal rhizotomy with mean of 292.2 min versus 76.8 min with neurotomy (P = 0.001) and the hospital stay of dorsal rhizotomy was longer with mean of 6.2 days versus 1.7 days with neurotomy (P = 0.001). Muscles power exhibited significant improvement in 53.3% of the total rhizotomies (P = 0.001). Following neurotomies; muscle tone showed marked improvement in 69.3% muscles which had normal tone and 31.9% of muscles had mild spasticity (P = 0.001). The H/M ratio following dorsal rhizotomies showed marked reduction of the ratio, and the mean was 0.11 versus 0.58 preoperatively.

Conclusion: Both neurotomies and dorsal rhizotomies were safe surgical procedures and were provided with good improvement in respect of: muscle power, severity of spasticity, patient's ambulation, gait, range of joint movement, associated pain, functional disability, and nerve excitability with no significant difference between both procedures.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00586-015-4326-yDOI Listing

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