object. a modified technique of open-door laminoplasty for cervical stenotic myelopathy (CSM) is described, and the role of evoked potential monitoring in selecting patients for surgery and evaluating results is discussed. methods. between october 1992 and october 1996, 33 patients with CSM underwent open-door laminoplasty. after surgery, in 27 patients (81.8%) different levels of clinical improvement were demonstrated, and in five of them (15%) full recovery was observed. the Japanese orthopaedic association score increased from 5 to 12 (mean 9.8) preoperatively to 8 to 14 (mean 11.6) postoperatively. at 1-year follow up, the N13 cervical response was restored in nine (75%) of 12 patients with isolated presurgical abnormality and in 57.1% of those with combined abnormalities of both N13 and P14 response. although significant clinical improvement was observed in 82% of the cases, in 24 of 33 patients motor evoked potential abnormalities persisted at least at one explored level. conclusions. of several laminoplasty techniques, the one described here offers some advantages: preservation of biomechanical function of posterior muscular-ligamentous complex, prevention of laminar collapse, smaller degrees in reduction of range of cervical motion, stabilization of the spine with no postoperative malalignment, and maintenance of decompressive effect that avoids recurrent stenosis. neurophysiological studies sometimes clarified neurological disorders that were only suspected on the basis of history and/or clinical examination. leading to early diagnosis.

Roselli, R., Pompucci, A., Formica, F., Restuccia, D., Di Lazzaro, V., Valeriani, M., et al. (2000). Open-door laminoplasty for cervical stenotic myelopathy: surgical technique and neurophysiological monitoring. JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 92(1), 38-43 [10.3171/spi.2000.92.1.0038].

Open-door laminoplasty for cervical stenotic myelopathy: surgical technique and neurophysiological monitoring

Valeriani, Massimiliano;
2000-01-01

Abstract

object. a modified technique of open-door laminoplasty for cervical stenotic myelopathy (CSM) is described, and the role of evoked potential monitoring in selecting patients for surgery and evaluating results is discussed. methods. between october 1992 and october 1996, 33 patients with CSM underwent open-door laminoplasty. after surgery, in 27 patients (81.8%) different levels of clinical improvement were demonstrated, and in five of them (15%) full recovery was observed. the Japanese orthopaedic association score increased from 5 to 12 (mean 9.8) preoperatively to 8 to 14 (mean 11.6) postoperatively. at 1-year follow up, the N13 cervical response was restored in nine (75%) of 12 patients with isolated presurgical abnormality and in 57.1% of those with combined abnormalities of both N13 and P14 response. although significant clinical improvement was observed in 82% of the cases, in 24 of 33 patients motor evoked potential abnormalities persisted at least at one explored level. conclusions. of several laminoplasty techniques, the one described here offers some advantages: preservation of biomechanical function of posterior muscular-ligamentous complex, prevention of laminar collapse, smaller degrees in reduction of range of cervical motion, stabilization of the spine with no postoperative malalignment, and maintenance of decompressive effect that avoids recurrent stenosis. neurophysiological studies sometimes clarified neurological disorders that were only suspected on the basis of history and/or clinical examination. leading to early diagnosis.
gen-2000
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/39
English
laminoplasty
stenotic cervical myelopathy
evoked potential
titanium miniplate
Roselli, R., Pompucci, A., Formica, F., Restuccia, D., Di Lazzaro, V., Valeriani, M., et al. (2000). Open-door laminoplasty for cervical stenotic myelopathy: surgical technique and neurophysiological monitoring. JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 92(1), 38-43 [10.3171/spi.2000.92.1.0038].
Roselli, R; Pompucci, A; Formica, F; Restuccia, D; Di Lazzaro, V; Valeriani, M; Scerrati, M
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/372663
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