| Literature DB >> 20847911 |
Fraser C Henderson1, William A Wilson, Stephen Mott, Alexander Mark, Kristi Schmidt, Joel K Berry, Alexander Vaccaro, Edward Benzel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chiari malformation, functional cranial settling and subtle forms of basilar invagination result in biomechanical neuraxial stress, manifested by bulbar symptoms, myelopathy and headache or neck pain. Finite element analysis is a means of predicting stress due to load, deformity and strain. The authors postulate linkage between finite element analysis (FEA)-predicted biomechanical neuraxial stress and metrics of neurological function.Entities:
Keywords: Chiari malformation; clivo-axial angle; craniocervical junction; deformative stress; finite element analysis; stretch myelopathy
Year: 2010 PMID: 20847911 PMCID: PMC2940090 DOI: 10.4103/2152-7806.66461
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Neurol Int ISSN: 2152-7806
Brainstem Disability Index
| The following 20 symptoms may be referable to pathology at the level of the brainstem. Please indicate yes or no whether your child has any of the following symptoms on a recurring or chronic basis. |
| Double vision |
| Memory loss |
| Dizziness |
| Vertigo |
| Ringing in the ears |
| Speech difficulties |
| Difficulty swallowing |
| Sleep apnea |
| Snoring or frequent awakening |
| Choking on food |
| Hands turn blue in cold weather |
| Numbness in your arms and shoulders |
| Numbness in your back and legs |
| Gets tired very easily |
| Unsteady walking |
| More clumsy than you used to be Urinates more often (every 1-2 hours) |
| Irritable bowel disease or gastroesophageal reflux disease |
| Weaker than you would expect in your arms or hand |
| Weaker in your legs |
| 5% for each positive response, 0%-100% |
Figure 1Generation of a finite element mesh
Figure 2Grabb-Oakes measurement: the perpendicular distance (*) from the BpC2 line (Basion to posterior inferior C2 body) to the dura. A value greater than or equal to 9 mm indicates ventral brainstem compression
Surgical series
| Patient | Age (yrs) | Primary Diagnoses | CAA | B-pC2 | Outcome | Complications | F/up (mos) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | 9 | Episodic respiratory difficulty, Chiari malformation | 115°/152° | 10 mm | +++ | Ø | 52 |
| #2 | 13 | Encephalomyelopathy, Basilar invagination | 116°/140° | 10 mm | +++ | Ø | 48 |
| #3 | 17 | Encephalomyelopathy, Basilar invagination | 132°/142° | 11 mm | +++ | Ø | 19 |
| #4 | 13 | Myelopathy, Chiari malformation, Scoliosis | 129°/139° | 11 mm | ++ | Ø | 17 |
| #5 | 15 | Severe neck pain, Cranial settling | 136°/161° | 9 mm | +++ | Ø | 24 |
CAA* = Preoperative and postoperative clivo-axial angle;
B-pC2** = Grabb-Oakes measurement of VBSC, Basion to ventral inferior C2
Preoperative and postoperative outcomes: clinical findings, metrics
| Patient | Presenting symptoms and signs | Postop. symptomatic improvement | SCOSIA stress forces (N/cm2) preop./ postop. | Pain (×/100) preop./ postop. | Brainstem disability index preop. / postop. | ASIA preop. / postop. | Karnofsky Preop. / Postop. | SF-36 Preop. / Postop. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | h/o resp. arrest, asthma, sleep apnea, HA, neck pain, nausea,, anhydrosis Decreased gag reflex, dysdiadochokinesia, Babinski | - Resolution of neck pain and HA, resp. abnormalities | 70/26 70/6 70/33 | 70/0 | 80%/0 | M-90/M-100 P-112/P-112 Lt-112/Lt-112 | 50%/100% | Phys: 31/69.1 Mental: 22.9/65.2 | ||
| - Improvement in strength, coordination | ||||||||||
| - No change in anhydrosis | ||||||||||
| #2 | Tongue thrusting, myoclonic spasms, paresthesias weakness, tics, anisocoria, absent gag reflex, hemi-hypoesthesia, Babinski | Resolution of tongue thrusting, tics, myoclonic spasms, strength and sensory deficit | 60/13 60/13 46/33 | 90/60 | 55%/5% | M-80/M-100 P-84/P-112 U-84/P-112 | 50%/l 00% | Phys: 43/47.6 Mental: 37.3/46.8 | ||
| Schizotypal disorder | ||||||||||
| #3 | Hyperactive, sleep apnea, HA, weakness imbalance, incoordination, urinary freq. hand flapping | - Resolution of hyperactivity, normal strength, coordination, balance, urinary urgency and hand flapping paresthesias | 26/6 33/6 60/20 | 55/0 | 55%/0 | M-93/M-100 P-112/P-112 Lt-112/Lt-112 | 85%/100% | Phys: 43.5/60.4 Mental: 47.3/57.2 | ||
| Hypoesthesia Hyper-reflexia, Babinski | - Improved hypopnea, reflexes | |||||||||
| ADHD | ||||||||||
| #4 | Chronic HA, emesis, dysphagia | Resolution of scoliosis, emesis, | 33/13 40/13 26/26 | 70/0 | 55%/0 | M-100/M-100 P-75/P-75 Lt-75/Lt-75 | 80%/100% | Phys: 37.2/59.5 Mental: 30.5/58.5 | ||
| Scoliosis, paresthesia, abnormal gait | Improved gait, and dysphagia. | |||||||||
| Cat-eye syndrome | Recurrence HA at 6 months. Repeat suboccip craniectomy | |||||||||
| #5 | Emesis, dysphagia ataxia, freq. falls, vertigo, chronic neck and back pain, sleep walking, hyperactivity, | Resolution of HA, back pain, sleep walking, emesis, dysphagia and vertigo. | 33/13 60/13 40/20 | 35/0 | 40%/10% | M-100/M-100 P-56/P-112 Lt-56/Lt-l 12 | 80%/100% | Phys: 43.7/46 Mental: 53.5/55.4 | ||
| Paresthesias, UE, fatigue, hyper-reflexia | Normalization of sensation, strength, coordination, socialization | |||||||||
| Asperger’s syndrome | No fatigue |
*The preoperative and postoperative predicted stress analyses given in N/cm2 represent the Von Mises stress (the aggregate of stress and strain in all axes, resulting from stretch and deformation). The Von Mises stresses are shown for the corticospinal tract, the dorsal columns and the nucleus solitarius/ dorsal motor nucleus, respectively. Only the maximum stress for each tract is listed.
Figure 3aThe computational predictions of stress of brainstem and spinal cord preoperatively demonstrated areas of high stress: 45-60 N/cm2 in the upper medulla within the region of the dorsal motor nucleus and nucleus solitarius, possibly contributive to the mild sleep apnea and the abdominal pain
Figure 3dThe stress has reduced at the C2 level in the posterolateral columns (13 N/cm2) and similarly in the anterior gray matter (13 N/cm2). The reduction in stress correlated with clinical improvement
Figure 4Patient # 1, status at 3 months post suboccipital craniectomy fusion/ stabilization with rib autograft. Clivo-axial angle was increased from 115° to 152°, the patient resumed non-contact sports 6 months after surgery
Figure 5aNormal craniocervical junction in the neutral position. The clivo-axial angle varies from 150° to 165°. There is minimal neuraxial strain in the neutral state
Figure 5dPathological craniocervical junction with an abnormal clivo-axial angle in flexion. Upon full flexion of the craniocervical junction, mathematical analysis demonstrates that the increase in the tangent arc creates a deformative strain approaching ε = 0.2. In vivo and in vitro models demonstrate loss of function with strains of 0.2