| Literature DB >> 33559797 |
Tomasz Klepinowski1, Natalia Żyłka2, Bartłomiej Pala3, Wojciech Poncyljusz2, Leszek Sagan3.
Abstract
High-riding vertebral artery (HRVA) and narrow C2 pedicles (C2P) pose a great risk of injuring the vessel during C2 pedicle or transarticular screw placement. Recent meta-analysis revealed a paucity of European studies regarding measurements and prevalence of these anatomical variants. Three hundred eighty-three consecutive cervical spine CT scans with 766 potential screw insertion sites were analyzed independently by two trained observers. C2 internal height (C2InH), C2 isthmus height (C2IsH), and C2P width were measured. Kappa statistics for inter- and intraobserver reliability as well as for inter-software agreement were calculated. HRVA was defined as C2IsH of ≤ 5 mm and/or C2InH of ≤ 2 mm. Narrow C2P was defined as C2P width ≤ 4 mm. STROBE checklist was followed. At least 1 HRVA was found in 25,3% (95% CI 21,1-29,8) of patients (16,7% of potential sites). At least 1 narrow C2P was seen in 36,8% (95% CI 32,1-41,7) of patients (23,8% of potential sites). Among those with HRVA, unilateral HRVA was present in 68,0% (95% CI 58,4-77,0), whereas bilateral HRVA in 32,0% (95% CI 23,0-41,6). No difference in terms of laterality (right or left) was seen neither for HRVA nor narrow C2P. Significant differences were found between females and males for all measurements. Each parameter showed either good or excellent inter- or intraobserver, and inter-software agreement coefficients. HRVA and narrow C2P are common findings in Central-European population and should be appreciated at the planning stage before craniocervical instrumentation. Measurements can be consistently reproduced by various observers at varying intervals using different software.Entities:
Keywords: C2 isthmus; Craniocervical fusion; High-riding vertebral artery; Narrow pedicles; Prevalence
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33559797 PMCID: PMC8592946 DOI: 10.1007/s10143-021-01493-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosurg Rev ISSN: 0344-5607 Impact factor: 3.042
Fig. 1Rendition of the sagittal scan through atlantoaxial facetal joint showing measurements of the C2 internal height (*) and C2 isthmus height (**) that are used in the definition of the high-riding vertebral artery. Open access figure from Tomasz Klepinowski et al 2020 [1]. Original Publisher: Springer Nature (Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Fig. 2a Exemplary measurements of C2 pedicle width. Normal width on the right side. Narrow pedicle on the left side. b Normal C2 isthmus height (solid line) and C2 internal height (arrow line). c A side with a high-riding vertebral artery. Short C2 isthmus height (solid line). Short C2 internal height (arrow line)
Interobserver, intraobserver, and inter-software agreement coefficients
| Measurement | Cohen’s kappa statistic (κ) | Reliability category* |
|---|---|---|
| Interobserver | ||
| Left HRVA | 0.848 | Excellent |
| Right HRVA | 0.873 | Excellent |
| Left narrow C2P | 0.784 | Good |
| Right narrow C2P | 0.795 | Good |
| Intraobserver | ||
| Left HRVA | 0.852 | Excellent |
| Right HRVA | 0.834 | Excellent |
| Left narrow C2P | 0.864 | Excellent |
| Right narrow C2P | 0.912 | Excellent |
| Inter-software | ||
| Left HRVA | 0.940 | Excellent |
| Right HRVA | 0.703 | Good |
| Left narrow C2P | 0.896 | Excellent |
| Right narrow C2P | 0.774 | Good |
*reliability categories were defined as follows: < 0.20 poor agreement, 0.21–0.40 fair, 0.41–0.60 moderate, 0.61–0.80 good, and > 0.80 excellent agreement. HRVA, high-riding vertebral artery. C2P, C2 pedicle
Comparison of mean measurements between males and females
| Measurement | Male [mm] | Female [mm] | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Left C2IsH | 8,3 | 6,2 | < 0,001 |
| Left C2InH | 7,5 | 6,9 | < 0,001 |
| Right C2IsH | 8,8 | 7,4 | 0,02 |
| Right C2InH | 8,2 | 6,9 | < 0,001 |
| Left C2 pedicle width | 5,4 | 4,8 | < 0,001 |
| Right C2 pedicle width | 5,7 | 5,2 | < 0,001 |
C2IsH C2 isthmus height. C2InH C2 internal height
Fig. 3A forest plot of the updated European prevalence of the high-riding vertebral artery. *this study