OBJECTIVE To report our experience of endoscopic disc removal by anterior approach for management of cervical myelopathy in 210 patients. METHODS A retrospective study of 187 cases of single- and… Click to show full abstract
OBJECTIVE To report our experience of endoscopic disc removal by anterior approach for management of cervical myelopathy in 210 patients. METHODS A retrospective study of 187 cases of single- and 23 cases of double-level disc disease was performed. Cases of myelopathy with or without unilateral or bilateral radiculopathy and unilateral radiculopathy with either soft or hard disc prolapse were included. Patients with ≥3 disc levels, unstable spine, infections, trauma, significant posterior compression, congenital canal stenosis, disc extending more than half the vertebral body height, and prior surgery at the same level were excluded. RESULTS C5-6 (n = 119 patients), C6-7 (n = 58 patients), C4-5 (n = 49 patients), C3-4 (n = 6 patients), and C2-3 (n = 1 patient) levels were represented. Visual analog scale and Nurick grading system were used to assess severity of neck and arm pain and functional outcomes, respectively. Preoperative mean visual analog scale scores for arm and neck pain were 6.7 and 3.2, respectively, which improved to 1.7 and 1.1 at 3 months after surgery. The average preoperative Nurick grade improved from 2.64 to 0.81 at 6 months postoperatively. Follow-up was 6-54 months. CONCLUSIONS Endoscopic anterior discectomy (disc preserving surgery) is an effective and safe alternative in cervical disc disease. Although there was reduction in disc height, clinical outcome was good at an average 29 months of follow-up. Long-term follow-up is required to assess any progressive disc degeneration and clinical results.
               
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