Skeletal dysplasia involving the subaxial cervical spine. Report of two cases and review of the literature.
Publication/Presentation Date
2-15-2006
Abstract
Because skeletal dysplasias are primary disorders of bone, they have not been commonly understood as neurosurgical diseases. Nevertheless, neurosurgical complications are commonly encountered in many cases of dysplasia syndromes. The authors present two cases of skeletal dysplasia that caused overt instability of the cervical spine. One patient with a diagnosis of Gorham disease of the cervical spine was treated with prolonged fixation in a halo brace after an initial attempt at instrumentation with a posterior occiput--C4 fusion. The other patient, who at birth was identified to have camptomelic dysplasia, has been treated conservatively from the outset. Although these two patients presented with different disorders--in one patient adequate mature bone never formed and in the other patient progressive bone loss became apparent after a seemingly normal initial development--these cases demonstrate unequivocally that surgical options for fusion are ultimately limited by the quality of the underlying bone. In patients in whom the bone itself is inadequate for use as a substrate for fusion, there are currently limited treatment options. Future improvements in our understanding of chondrogenesis and ossification may lead to the design of superior methods of encouraging fusion in these patients; however, at the present time, long-term maintenance in a halo brace may, in fact, be the only treatment.
Volume
20
Issue
2
First Page
8
Last Page
8
ISSN
1092-0684
Published In/Presented At
Lekovic, G. P., Mariwalla, N. R., Horn, E. M., Chang, S., Rekate, H. L., & Theodore, N. (2006). Skeletal dysplasia involving the subaxial cervical spine. Report of two cases and review of the literature. Neurosurgical focus, 20(2), E8. https://doi.org/10.3171/foc.2006.20.2.9
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
16512659
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article