| Literature DB >> 26251807 |
Terry C Burns1, Stefan A Mindea1, Arjun V Pendharkar1, Nicolae B Lapustea1, Ioana Irime1, Jayakar V Nayak2.
Abstract
Ventral epidural abscess with osteomyelitis at the craniocervical junction is a rare occurrence that typically mandates spinal cord decompression via a transoral approach. However, given the potential for morbidity with transoral surgery, especially in the setting of immunosuppression, together with the advent of extended endonasal techniques, the transnasal approach could be attractive for selected patients. We present two cases of ventral epidural abscess and osteomyelitis at the craniocervical junction involving C1/C2 that were successfully treated via the endoscopic transnasal approach. Both were treated in staged procedures involving posterior cervical fusion followed by endoscopic transnasal resection of the ventral C1 arch and odontoid process for decompression of the ventral spinal cord and medulla. Dural repairs were successfully performed using multilayered, onlay techniques where required. Both patients tolerated surgery exceedingly well, had brief postoperative hospital stays, and recovered uneventfully to their neurologic baselines. Postoperative magnetic resonance imaging confirmed complete decompression of the foramen magnum and upper C-spine. These cases illustrate the advantages and low morbidity of the endonasal endoscopic approach to the craniocervical junction in the setting of frank skull base infection and immunosuppression, representing to our knowledge a unique application of this technique to osteomyelitis and epidural abscess at the craniocervical junction.Entities:
Keywords: C1; craniocervical junction osteomyelitis; dens; endoscopic transnasal odontoidectomy; extended endonasal approach; odontoid; skull base; spine infection
Year: 2015 PMID: 26251807 PMCID: PMC4520966 DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1395492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol Surg Rep ISSN: 2193-6358
Fig. 1Case 1: (A) Gadolinium enhancement posterior to the dens is seen with significant mass effect on the cevicomedullary junction. (B) Signal abnormality is seen in the upper cervical cord and medulla as well as bone on T2-weighted MRI. (C) Preoperative CT angiogram highlights bony changes, vascular structures (arrows), and unobstructed access to the atlantoaxial junction via the endonasal route. (D) C1–2 posterior instrumentation is seen on lateral X-ray. (E) Postoperative CT demonstrates the extent of bony resection achieved (arrows). (F) Postoperative T2-weighted MRI confirms decompression of the cervicomedullary junction. CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Fig. 2Case 2: (A) Preoperative T1-weighted imaging with gadolinium demonstrates an enhancing collection centered at the atlantoaxial junction. (B) T2-weighted imaging shows heterogeneous signal intensity in the collection with posterior mass effect. (C) Coronal (upper panel), and axial (lower panel) CT cuts through the atlantoaxial joint suggestive of diseased bone. (D) Lateral X-ray demonstrating extension of the previous construct to the occiput. Also visible is the patient's previous anterior fusion. (E) Intraoperative CT confirming the extent of odontoid resection. (F) Postoperative T1-weighted image with gadolinium after resection demonstrating cervicomedullary decompression. CT, computed tomography.