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Surgical resection of neoplastic cervical spine lesions in relation to the vertebral artery V2 segment
Author(s) -
Moh’d. Al Barbarawi,
Ziad Odat,
Mwafaq Alheis,
Tareq Qudsieh,
Suhair Qudsieh
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
neurology international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.39
H-Index - 16
ISSN - 2035-8377
DOI - 10.4081/ni.2010.e11
Subject(s) - medicine , corpectomy , vertebral artery , radiology , vertebrectomy , surgery , magnetic resonance imaging , myelopathy , neurovascular bundle , neck pain , cervical vertebrae , surgical planning , spinal cord , decompression , alternative medicine , pathology , psychiatry
Neoplastic cervical spine lesions are seen infrequently by the spinal surgeon. The surgical management of these tumors, particularly with associated neurovascular compromise, is challenging in terms of achieving proper resection and spinal stabilization and ensuring no subsequent recurrence or failure of fixation. In this report we highlight some of the problems encountered in the surgical management of tumors involving the cervical spine with techniques applied for gross total resection of the tumor without compromising the vertebral arteries. Ten patients with neoplastic cervical spine lesions were managed in our study. The common cardinal presentation was neck and arm pain with progressive cervical radiculo-myelopathy. All patients had plain X-rays, computer tomography scans, and magnetic resonance imaging of the cervical spine. Digital subtraction or magnetic resonance angiograms were performed on both vertebral arteries when the pathology was found to be in proximity to the vertebral artery. When a tumor blush with feeders was evident, endovascular embolization to minimize intraoperative bleeding was also considered. A single approach or a combined anterior cervical approach for corpectomy and cage-with-plate fixation and posterior decompression for resection of the rest of the tumor with spinal fixation was then accomplished as indicated. All cases made a good neurological recovery and had no neural or vascular complications. On the long-term follow-up of the survivors there was no local recurrence or surgical failure. Only three patients died: two from the primary malignancy and one from pulmonary embolism. This report documents a safe and reliable way to deal with neoplastic cervical spine lesions in proximity to vertebral arteries with preservation of both arteries

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