| Literature DB >> 22846593 |
Tomohiro Miyashita1, Masashi Yamazaki, Akihiko Okawa, Minori Yoneda, Atsuomi Aiba, Masao Koda, Kazuhisa Takahashi.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In patients with Tourette's syndrome who have severe motor tics, involuntary neck movements can enhance degenerative changes in the cervical spine, occasionally causing myelopathy. There have been a limited number of reports on surgical treatment for cervical myelopathy caused by Tourette's syndrome, and a consensus for surgical treatment has not been fully established. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report that describes a case of cervical myelopathy in a patient with Tourette's syndrome with severe motor tics who has undergone multiple surgeries of the cervical spine. CASEEntities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22846593 PMCID: PMC3443656 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-6-223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Reports of surgery for cervical myelopathy associated with Tourette’s syndrome
| 27 | M | C6/7 discectomy | ND | 2 months | Improved | [ |
| 38 | M | C3-T2 laminectomy + C6-7 ASF + C7-T1 PF | Cervical traction | ND | Fusion breaking | [ |
| 23 | M | C3-5 laminectomy | ND | 29 years | Recurred | [ |
| 15 | M | C3-7 laminoplasty | ND | ND | Improved | [ |
| 25 | M | C5/6 discectomy | ND | 3 years | Recurred | [ |
| 52 | M | C2-5 laminectomy + LMS | Halo vest | 6 months | Improved | [ |
| 52 | M | C3-7 laminectomy + LMS | ND | 7 months | Improved | [ |
ASF anterior spinal fusion; LMS lateral mass screw fixation; M male; ND not described; PF posterior fusion.
Figure 1Three images obtained upon admission to our hospital (4.5 months after the patient’s third surgery). (A) A lateral view myelogram showing anterior compression of the dural tube at the C4-C5 level. (B) An axial computed tomographic myelogram showing that the spinal cord is compressed from the anterior and posterior directions at the C4-C5 level. (C) A T2-weighted midsagittal magnetic resonance image showing spinal canal stenosis at the C4-C5 level due to pseudoarthrosis of the C4-C5 fusion.
Figure 2Three images following C3-C7 decompression and spinal fusion from both the anterior and posterior approaches. (A) A lateral view postoperative radiogram taken immediately after the fourth surgery showing good alignment of the cervical spine. (B) A midsagittal computed tomographic reconstruction taken three months after the fourth surgery showing a mature fusion mass at C3-C7. (C) A T2-weighted midsagittal magnetic resonance image taken one year after the fourth surgery showing appropriate decompression of the spinal cord.
Figure 3Two images taken six years after the fourth surgery. (A) A lateral view cervical radiogram showing successful interbody fusion. (B) A T2-weighted midsagittal magnetic resonance image showing mild disc degeneration at the adjacent C2-C3 and C7-T1 levels, but no spinal cord compression.