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. 2000 Feb;14(1):40-3.
doi: 10.1080/02688690042898.

Results of posterior cervical foraminotomy for treatment of cervical spondylitic radiculopathy

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Results of posterior cervical foraminotomy for treatment of cervical spondylitic radiculopathy

J P Grieve et al. Br J Neurosurg. 2000 Feb.

Abstract

We evaluated the results of posterior cervical foraminotomy for spondylitic radiculopathy using a questionnaire sent to all 77 patients who had undergone surgery between 1990 and 1995 at our institution. Sixty-two patients (40 male) returned their questionnaires, one of whom had undergone two procedures (dealt with as separate events). Sixty patients complained of pre-operative arm pain; of these 42 (70%) had complete or > 75% resolution of their pain, 14 (23%) had < 75% improvement in their pain and four (7%) had the same or worsened pain at the time of the questionnaire. Sixteen patients (27%) reported initial improvement in symptoms with subsequent deterioration. The mean patient satisfaction score using a linear analogue scale from 0 to 10 was 7.5. Main postoperative complaints were neck pain (22%), persisting motor deficit (6%) and persisting sensory deficit (9%). One patient suffered nerve root damage at surgery. For unilateral and, in some cases, multi-level degenerative disease causing cervical radiculopathy, posterior cervical foraminotomy is a useful technique with the advantage of avoiding fusion, immobilization and the long-term risk of instability.

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