Abstract
Introduction
The importance of a correct preoperative radiological diagnosis in patients with cervical myelopathy has been widely demonstrated. Indeed, few studies still exist about the correlation between postoperative radiographic and clinical modifications.
Materials and Methods
The authors present a prospective study of 54 patients with cervical spondilogenetic myelopathy, who underwent surgery for corpectomy and anterior fusion with mesh in a period between January 2005 and August 2013. Images of cervical RMN were studied pre-and postoperatively and attention has been focused on alterations of intramedullary signal on T1- and T2-weighted sequences. Pre-and postoperative changes were correlated with clinical data (obtained by means of a Nurick scales and JOA classification—modified by Benzel). In relation to cervical RM-based studies, patients were divided into 3 groups: (A) no intramedullary signal alteration; (B) alterations in T2-weighted sequences; (C) alterations of the signal in both T1- and T2-weighted sequences.
Results
In all patients, decompression of the cervical spinal cord has been demonstrated by extension of the anteroposterior diameter of the spinal canal and by increase in the thickness of the subarachnoid space. In group A patients, no intramedullary signal changes were highlighted postoperatively. Patients in group B showed improvement on the base of hyperintensity disappearance on T2-weighted MRI, correlating with an improvement in the clinical quadro. Patients of group C have not been showing changes in the intramedullary MRI signal despite spinal cord decompression.
Conclusions
Signal alterations in T1 are an unfavorable prognostic index and proved to be irreversible. They correlate with a lack of clinical improvement of the patient. Patients in group B are those with the greatest clinical benefit after surgery and in whom clinical improvement correlates clearly with the radiological outcome.
