AI Article Synopsis

  • Vascular complications after anterior cervical spine surgery, while rare, can lead to serious issues for patients, such as cerebral infarction, emphasizing the need for risk factor screening prior to surgery.
  • A case study is presented where a patient developed symptoms like Horner syndrome post-surgery, followed by left hemiplegia due to ischemia in the right middle cerebral artery territory, leading to a complex emergency intervention.
  • Despite the patient having no previous medical issues, tests revealed dyslipidemia, suggesting that pre-surgical ultrasound assessments of cervical arteries could help identify patients at higher risk for serious complications.

Article Abstract

Vascular complications succeeding anterior cervical spine surgery are rare, but their consequences represent a major burden for the patient. Cerebral infarction following anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) is uncommon. However, screening for risk factors before surgery should become mandatory. We present the case of a patient with no significant medical history who underwent ACDF for a C5/C6 herniated disc with myelopathy. Although the surgery was uneventful, after the surgery, partial right palpebral ptosis and miosis were noted, suggestive of Horner syndrome. On the fifth postoperative day, the patient experienced left hemiplegia and drowsiness. An emergency CT scan and cerebral MRI revealed ischemia in the right middle cerebral artery territory. The patient was transferred to a neurology center for mechanical thrombectomy, which revealed a complete occlusion of the right internal carotid artery. The procedure had to be halted due to blood extravasation at the internal carotid artery bifurcation to prevent further complications. An angio-CT examination of the cervical arteries exposed a soft atheromatous plaque on the right internal carotid artery, immediately after the bifurcation. Despite the patient having no significant medical history, blood tests indicated dyslipidemia. At the two-month follow-up, the patient remained hemiplegic, with mild dysphasia. Performing carotid and vertebral Doppler ultrasound before cervical spine surgery might be useful, whenever possible, to assess high-risk factors for ischemic events and avoid such debilitating complications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11297389PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.63846DOI Listing

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