AI Article Synopsis

  • A study aimed to analyze the impact of concomitant foraminotomy on the incidence of upper limb palsy (ULP) following cervical laminoplasty, highlighting the uncertainty around this relationship.
  • Among 4080 patients reviewed, the study found that those who underwent laminoplasty with foraminotomy had a significantly higher ULP incidence (15.1%) compared to those who had laminoplasty alone (3.1%).
  • The findings also revealed that the location of foraminotomy often matched where ULP occurred and suggested that factors like preoperative muscle weakness and potential thermal nerve damage contribute to this higher incidence of ULP in patients undergoing the combined procedure.*

Article Abstract

Objective: Although concomitant foraminotomy has been reported to increase the risk of postoperative upper limb palsy (ULP) in cervical laminoplasty, the specific effects of concomitant foraminotomy on ULP remain uncertain. This study aimed to clarify the effect of concomitant foraminotomy on ULP in cervical laminoplasty.

Methods: We identified 19 patients who developed ULP after laminoplasty with concomitant foraminotomy for radiculomyelopathy with nerve root impingement (laminoplasty with concomitant foraminotomy group [F-group]) from 4080 patients who underwent primary cervical laminoplasty at 27 affiliated institutions between 2012 and 2018. An age- and sex-matched control group comprised patients who developed ULP after laminoplasty without concomitant foraminotomy (n = 76, 4:1 ratio with F-group). Collected data included the time of onset and distribution of ULP (side and level). The site of foraminotomy was recorded in the F-group.

Results: The F-group showed a significantly higher incidence of ULP than the candidates for the control group (15.1% vs. 3.1%, P < 0.001). The site of foraminotomy was consistent with the distribution of ULP in 79% (15 of 19 patients) of the F-group. The F-group showed a significantly higher proportion of preoperative upper-limb muscle weakness (74% vs. 37%, P = 0.005) and early-onset ULP occurring by postoperative day 1 (63% vs. 33%, P = 0.02) compared with the control group.

Conclusions: Our results indicate that the foraminotomy procedure in the stenotic foramen is directly involved in ULP. Combined with a previous report suggesting that early-onset ULP is associated with thermal nerve damage, our results indicate that thermal nerve damage partly explains the increased incidence of ULP in the F-group.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2020.09.105DOI Listing

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