Sixty-one patients treated with C1-2 transarticular screw fixation for spinal instability participated in a detailed clinical and radiological study to determine outcome and clarify potential hazards. The most common condition was rheumatoid arthritis (37 patients) followed by traumatic instability (15 patients). Twenty-one of these patients (one-third) underwent either surgical revision for a previously failed posterior fusion technique or a combined anteroposterior procedure. Eleven patients underwent transoral odontoidectomy and excision of the arch of C-1 prior to posterior surgery. No patient died, but there were five vertebral artery (VA) injuries and one temporary cranial nerve palsy. Screw malposition (14% of placements) was comparable to another large series reported by Grob, et al. There were five broken screws, and all were associated with incorrect placement. Anatomical measurements were made on 25 axis bones. In 20% the VA groove on one side was large enough to reduce the width of the C-2 pedicle, thus preventing the safe passage of a 3.5-mm diameter screw. In addition to the obvious dangers in patients with damaged or deficient atlantoaxial lateral mass, the following risk factors were identified in this series: 1) incomplete reduction prior to screw placement, accounting for two-thirds of screw complications and all five VA injuries; 2) previous transoral surgery with removal of the anterior tubercle or the arch of the atlas, thus obliterating an important fluoroscopic landmark; and 3) failure to appreciate the size of the VA in the axis pedicle and lateral mass. A low trajectory with screw placement below the atlas tubercle was found in patients with VA laceration. The technique that was associated with an 87% fusion rate requires detailed computerized tomography scanning prior to surgery, very careful attention to local anatomy, and nearly complete atlantoaxial reduction during surgery.
Data from the largest prospective surgical series of patients with symptomatic spinal metastases revealed that tumor type, the number of spinal metastases, and the presence of visceral metastases are the most useful predictors of survival and that quality of life is best predicted by preoperative Karnofsky, Frankel, and EQ-5D scores. The Karnofsky score predicts quality of life and survival and is easy to determine at the bedside, unlike the EQ-5D index. Karnofsky score, tumor type, and spinal and visceral metastases should be considered the 4 most important prognostic variables that influence patient management.
Late-onset progressive myelopathy, years after odontoid fracture, is considered a rarity. Sixteen patients with diagnosis of their odontoid fractures delayed from four months to 45 years have been studied and treated. Three had forgotten about the injury and, in the rest, the significance had been minimized by their clinicians. Fifteen patients had characteristic C-2 nerve root pain and 10 had noted weak hands and walking difficulties. Fifteen patients had Type II fractures, which were mobile in 11; hypertrophic pseudoarthrosis was marked in two. In seven patients it was confirmed at surgery that all or part of the transverse ligament was interposed in the fracture. Transoral surgery, combined with a variety of posterior fusion techniques, has allowed cord decompression, an understanding of the pathomechanics, and sound posterior bone fusion with arrest of the myelopathic condition. Measurements of craniovertebral angles and cord cross-sectional area in this series revealed a rough correlation, but the most striking relationship was between length of delay in diagnosis and diminished cord area in both non-union and malunion, suggesting a progressive injury mechanism. It is proposed that late myelopathy following odontoid fracture may be more common than hitherto believed and should be considered in the evaluation of patients with cervical spondylosis. The condition may be progressive. Finally, non-union may be due to interposition of the transverse ligament.
Sixty-six patients had surgery for an intramedullary nerve sheath tumour under the care of one surgical team in a 16-year period. Surgery concentrated on radical intra- and extradural excision combined if necessary with vertebral column reconstruction. Ninety procedures were used in 35 males and 30 females with an age range 12-81 years. Forty-five per cent were located in the cervical, 26% in the thoracic and 29% in the lumbosacral region. Eighteen patients had NF1 and two patients NF2. Sixty-five per cent were schwannomas, 27% were mixed histology and 6% malignant. In terms of functional outcome, 37 patients improved by one or more Frankel grades, three deteriorated by one Frankel grade and no one who presented with symptoms alone deteriorated. There were no operative deaths; no instrumentation failures and five patients developed a CSF leak.
Transarticular screws at the C1 to C2 level of the cervical spine provide rigid fixation, but there is a danger of injury to a vertebral artery. The risk is related to the technical skill of the surgeon and to variations in local anatomy. We studied the grooves for the vertebral artery in 50 dry specimens of the second cervical vertebra (C2). They were often asymmetrical, and in 11 specimens one of the grooves was deep enough to reduce the internal height of the lateral mass at the point of fixation to < or =2.1 mm, and the width of the pedicle on the inferior surface of C2 to < or =2 mm. In such specimens, the placement of a transarticular screw would put the vertebral artery at extreme risk, and there is not enough bone to allow adequate fixation. Before any decision is made concerning the type of fixation to be used at C2 we recommend that a thin CT section be made at the appropriate angle to show both the depth and any asymmetry of the grooves for the vertebral artery.
Summary: CBF has been measured with the hydrogen clearance technique in the two cerebral hemispheres of the gerbil under halothane anaesthesia. This has been correlated with changes in local pH, tissue lactate, and phosphorus energy metabolites measured in the same an imals with lH and 31p nuclear magnetic resonance spec troscopy. We demonstrate a threshold flow value for the The metabolic changes that are associated with reduced CBF have been extensively studied by many workers (Siesj6, 1978). When the flow falls sufficiently, there is a decline in high-energy phos phates, an increase in inorganic phosphate (P), an increase in lactate, and a decline in pH, and the time courses of these changes in acute ischaemia have been well documented in a number of animal models. However, much remains to be learned about the precise relationship between flow, energy consumption, and metabolic state. For example, can we define a critical threshold value of flow at which the energy status of the brain tissue becomes impaired, and how does this relate to thresholds for brain function? The results of Eklof and Siesj6Received December 11,1986; accepted February 20,1987 394 metabolic changes associated with energy failure at a level similar to the values previously reported for elec trical failure and tissue water accumulation, but higher than that associated with breakdown of extracellular po tassium homeostasis.
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