| Literature DB >> 24436709 |
James M Schuster1, Fangyi Zhang2, Daniel C Norvell3, Jeffrey T Hermsmeyer3.
Abstract
Study Design Systematic review. Study Rationale One of the most consistent indications for a Chiari decompression is tonsillar descent meeting the radiographic criteria and an associated syrinx in a symptomatic patient. In counseling patients about surgery, it would be advantageous to have information regarding the expected outcome with regard to the syrinx and other possible treatments available if the result is suboptimal. Clinical Questions The clinical questions include: (1) What is the average rate of recurrent or residual syringomyelia following posterior fossa decompression as a result of Chiari malformation with associated syringomyelia? (2) What treatment methods have been reported in the literature for managing recurrent or residual syringomyelia after initial posterior fossa decompression? Materials and Methods Available search engines were utilized to identify publications dealing with recurrent or residual syrinx after Chiari decompression and/or management of the syrinx. Rates of residual or recurrent syrinx were extracted and management strategies were recorded. Overall strength of evidence was quantified. Results Of the 72 citations, 11 citations met inclusion criteria. Rates of recurrent/residual syringomyelia after decompression in adults range from 0 to 22% with an average of 6.7%. There were no studies that discussed specifically management of the remaining syrinx. Conclusion Rates of recurrent/residual syringomyelia after Chiari decompression in adults range from 0 to 22% (average 6.7%). Although no studies describing the optimal management of residual syrinx were found, there is general agreement that the aim of the initial surgery is to restore relatively unimpeded flow of cerebrospinal across the craniocervical junction. Large holocord syrinx may induce a component of spinal cord injury even with adequate decompression and reduction in the caliber of the syrinx, resulting in permanent symptoms of injury.Entities:
Keywords: Chiari decompression; residual syrinx
Year: 2013 PMID: 24436709 PMCID: PMC3836893 DOI: 10.1055/s-0033-1357362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Spine Care J ISSN: 1663-7976
Fig. 1Flowchart showing results of literature search.
Characteristics of included studies with patients having Chiari malformation with syringomyelia treated by posterior decompression
| Author (y) | Study design | Study population | Initial decompression | Rate of recurrent or residual syringomyelia | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al (2011) | Case-series |
| PFD | Syringomyelia changes in extended and local PFD: | NR |
| Alfieri and Pinna (2012) | Case-series |
| PFD | 1-year F/U: | NR |
| Batzdorf et al (2013) | Case-series |
| Posterior fossa decompression (PFD) | Recurrent syringomyelia: 1/177 (0.6%) | NR |
| Depreitere et al (2000) | Case-series |
| PFD | •No improvement (no collapse) 1/22 (4.5%) | NR |
| Ellenbogen et al (2000) | Case-series |
| PFD | •Good (collapse > 75%, returned to normal lifestyle with no restrictions) 20/29 (69%) | NR |
| Fischer (1995) | Case-series |
| PFD | Syrinx size: | NR |
| Garcia-Uria (1981) | Case-series |
| PFD | •Improvement 15/27 (55.5%) | NR |
| Mueller and Oro' (2005) | Case-series |
| PFD | QOL reported: | NR |
| Noudel et al (2011) | Case-series |
| PFD | Improved recovery 11/11 | NR |
| Silva et al (2010) | Case-series |
| PFD | •Improvement 10/10 (100%) | NR |
| Vaquero et al (1990) | Case-series |
| PFD | Syrinx size: | NR |
Abbreviations: F/U, follow-up; NR, not reported; PFD, posterior fossa decompression; QOL, quality of life.
Outcomes after PFD for Chiari malformation with associated syringomyelia
| Author (y) | Worsening | Recurrent/residual | Increase of syrinx size | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| ||
| Zhang et al (2011) | 5/132 (3.8) | 5/132 (3.8) | ||
| Alfieri and Pinna (2012) | 17/69 (15.6) | 17/69 (15.6) | ||
| Batzdorf et al (2013) | 1/177 (0.6) | 1/177 (0.6) | ||
| Depreitere et al (2000) | 0/22 (0) | 0/22 (0) | ||
| Ellenbogen et al (2000) | 1/29 (3.4) | 1/29 (3.4) | ||
| Fischer (1995) | 0/12 (0) | 0/12 (0) | ||
| Garcia-Uria (1981) | 6/27 (22.2) | 6/27 (22.2) | ||
| Mueller and Oro' (2005) | 11/112 (9.8) | 11/112 (9.8) | ||
| Noudel et al (2011) | 0/11 (0) | 0/11 (0) | ||
| Silva et al (2010) | 0/10 (0) | 0/10 (0) | ||
| Vaquero et al (1990) | 0/15 (0) | 0/15 (0) | ||
| Combined | 39/383 (10.2) | 1/177 (0.6) | 1/56 (1.8) | 41/616 (6.7) |
Abbreviation: PFD, posterior fossa decompression.
Evidence summary
| Outcomes | Strength of evidence | Conclusions/comments |
|---|---|---|
| Question 1: What is the average rate of recurrent or residual syringomyelia following posterior fossa decompression as a result of Chiari malformation with associated syringomyelia? | ||
| Recurrent/residual syringomyelia | Rates of recurrent/residual syringomyelia after posterior fossa decompression in adults range from 0–22% with an average across studies of 6.7%. These studies are case series from different populations. Because of the low quality of individual studies and the inconsistency between studies, there is insufficient evidence to establish an expected rate of recurrence; however, we can provide surgeons and patients with a range of estimates to consider. | |
| Question 2: What treatment methods have been reported in the literature for managing recurrent or residual syringomyelia after initial posterior fossa decompression? | ||
| Treatments | Not applicable | This was a descriptive key question and therefore an overall strength of evidence is not applicable. |
Fig. 2Persistent compression after Chiari procedure (A, B) with persistent syrinx (B, C).
Fig. 3Computed tomography showing persistent compression at the foramen magnum (A) and C1 (B).
Fig. 4Increased bone removal after revision decompression.
Fig. 5Improved decompression at the skull base.
Fig. 6Persistent/recurrent syrinx.
Fig. 7Decrease caliber of syrinx after syringopleural shunt.