Cervical myelopathy is a condition describing a compression at the cervical level of the spinal column resulting in spasticity (sustained muscle contractions), hyperreflexia, pathologic reflexes, digit/hand clumsiness, and/or gait disturbance. Classically it has an insidious onset progressing in a stepwise manner with functional decline. Without treatment, patients may progress toward significant paralysis and loss of function. Surgery is either anterior or posterior decompression of the tight area and likely fusion. A poor prognosis is associated with symptomatic duration of more than 18 months, increased cervical spine range of motion, and female gender.[1][2][3][4][5]
While myelopathy is a term relating to the results from the compression of the spinal cord, stenosis is a term describing a narrowing of a normally patent canal. In the cervical spine, certain patients are more predisposed to myelopathy due to a congenitally narrowed spine cervical canal. Subsequent progression of stenosis or a cervical disc herniation will then more likely results in myelopathy at this level. Degenerative changes are usually at C5 and C6 or C6 and C7 due to the increased motion permitted at these levels. Additional contributors to canal narrowing are the infolding of the ligamentum flavum, olisthesis, osteophytes, and facet hypertrophy. Myelopathy will develop in approximately 100% of patients with greater than 60% canal stenosis (of less than 6 mm disc cord space). Age is the most powerful predictor of perioperative morbidity and unfavorable neurologic recovery.
Interestingly, when a patient with neck pain has radical symptoms following a muscle dermatome, he or she is more likely to improve from operative correction than those without radicular pain. It is more likely that this pain has a predictable source and origin if there is a particular myotome it follows. About 65% of patients that have both neck pain and radicular symptoms will benefit from surgical decompression.
Asians are at increased risk of cervical myelopathy (1.9% to 4.3% of individuals older than 30 years) due to their increased prevalence of ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament, which is a source of compression.
Cervical spondylotic myelopathy will frequently involve compression of the lateral corticospinal tracts resulting in (voluntary skeletal muscle control), and the spinocerebellar tracts (proprioception). Together, these deficits are responsible for the wide-based spastic gait with clumsy upper extremity function that is classic to cervical myelopathy. Additional commonly involved spinal cord regions are the spinothalamic tracts, which are responsible for contralateral pain and temperature sensation, the posterior columns, which are responsible for the ipsilateral position and vibration sense, and the dorsal nerve root, which is responsible for dermatomal sensation.[6][7][8]
Patients presenting with myelopathy experience predominately upper extremity symptoms. These may include hand clumsiness, and a limited ability to perform fine motor tasks such as buttoning a shirt, combing hair, holding small objects, and differentiate coin sizes. Regarding lower extremity signs, patients will typically ambulate with a wide-based gait and weakness. Neck pain and radicular symptoms are also common. Additionally, physicians should examine for a Lhermitte sign (provocative positions that create an electric shock-like sensation either down the back or into an extremity). Indicators of poor prognosis include bowel or bladder dysfunction, and general weakness.
Obtaining a history from the patient should focus on the timeline of pain, radiation of pain, and inciting events. A presentation of radiating pain correlates with canal stenosis. Radiating pain as the main issue has a much more predictable surgical outcome compared to a presentation of non-specific neck pain that likely is related to muscle fatigue and strain.
All physical examinations should include an evaluation of the neurologic function of the arms, legs, bladder, and bowels. The key to a thorough exam is organization and patience. The clinician should evaluate not only strength but also sensation and reflexes. It is also important to examine the skin along the back and document the presence of tenderness to compression or any prior surgical scars.
The following should specifically be examined in cervical myelopathy patients:
Imaging
Non-surgical management should include anti-inflammatories, physical therapy, ultrasound modalities, and at times, corticosteroid injections, but these all supply temporary pain relief. What is clear is that once the symptomatology has started its progression, these short-term alternatives will not be a definitive treatment.[9][10][11][12]
In the setting of progression, surgical management should be highly considered. The goal of surgery is to increase the canal space which will lessen/eliminate the cord compression. It is now a general recommendation to surgically intervene earlier as opposed to a carefully waiting period. Regarding the surgical intervention, this can be done wither anterior or posterior.
For posterior, this approach should occur in lordosis deformities and when the pathology is occurring at the posterior aspect of the canal. One option is a laminectomy (ideally with preoperative lordosis greater than 10 degrees and absence of instability). Posterior approaches possibly have higher infection rates compared to anterior.
For anterior, this would be an Anterior Cervical Diskectomy and Fusion (ACDF). This can occur up to 3 disc levels. It is reported that 9% to 27% of patients will have a transient sore throat and dysphagia, usually resolving within 12 weeks. The most common neurologic complication is recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy in 3% of patients.
Alternatives include:
An MRI can provide some guidance for clinicians and patients about the potential for improvement. Based on a systematic review of MRI findings by Tetreault et al. in 2013:
The diagnosis and management of cervical myelopathy are with an interprofessional team that consists of a nurse practitioner, neurologist, neurosurgeon, orthopedic surgeon, physiotherapist, and physiatrist. The treatment depends on symptoms and the degree of spinal stenosis.
Non-surgical management should include anti-inflammatories, physical therapy, ultrasound modalities, and at times, corticosteroid injections, but these all supply temporary pain relief. What is clear is that once the symptomatology has started its progression, these short-term alternatives will not be a definitive treatment.
In the setting of progression, surgical management should be highly considered. The goal of surgery is to increase the canal space which will lessen/eliminate the cord compression. It is now a general recommendation to surgically intervene earlier as opposed to a carefully waiting period. Regarding the surgical intervention, this can be done wither anterior or posterior.
The outcomes of these patients depend on the cause. Even though surgery is effective, it also has serious complications that can be life-threatening. For patients who obtain symptom relief with non-surgical treatment, the prognosis is good.[6]
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[6] | Zhang L,Chen J,Cao C,Zhang YZ,Shi LF,Zhai JS,Huang T,Li XC, Anterior versus posterior approach for the therapy of multilevel cervical spondylotic myelopathy: a meta-analysis and systematic review. Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery. 2019 Feb 9; [PubMed PMID: 30739192] |
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[8] | Grelat M,Gimenez C,Madkouri R, Cervical Cord Compression by Exostosis. The Journal of orthopaedic and sports physical therapy. 2019 Feb; [PubMed PMID: 30704359] |
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[12] | Fehlings MG,Kwon BK,Tetreault LA, Guidelines for the Management of Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy and Spinal Cord Injury: An Introduction to a Focus Issue. Global spine journal. 2017 Sep; [PubMed PMID: 29164034] |