One-stage anterior cervical decompression and posterior stabilization
with circumferential arthrodesis. A study of twenty-four patients who had a traumatic or a neoplastic lesion. McAfee-PC; Bohlman-HH Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Johns Hopkins University J-Bone-Joint-Surg-Am. 1989 Jan; 71(1): 78-88 Twenty-four patients had a combined anterior cervical decompression and posterior stabilization with circumferential spinal arthrodesis for treatment of either a tumor or an injury. The indication for operation was a fixed kyphosis and an incomplete neurological deficit or cervical instability. All but two patients had substantial improvement, having regained strength or had a reduction in the deformity, or both. The two exceptional patients, both of whom were quadriparetic, had no change. The operation is formidable and requires an average of 6.9 hours of general anesthesia; however, its use is justified in patients who have the appropriate indications.
Original Text by Clifford R. Wheeless, III, MD.
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