Two-stage corrective surgery for severe rigid cervical kyphotic deformity with unilateral vertebral artery occlusion after old blunt trauma: a case report

Spinal Cord Ser Cases. 2018 Mar 7:4:18. doi: 10.1038/s41394-018-0051-1. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Introduction: There are considerable risks for vertebral artery (VA) injury in case of corrective surgery for a severe and rigid cervical kyphotic deformity. This case report describes a rare case of surgical management for pre-existing traumatic rigid cervical kyphosis associated with unilateral VA occlusion.

Case presentation: A 73-year-old male fell down and injured his neck. He was referred to our hospital 10 months after injury because his degree of head drop progressed gradually to a chin-on-chest position such that he could not look straight forward. On plain X-ray, the C2-7 angles in the neutral, flexion, and extension positions were 61°, 71°, and 50°, respectively. CT revealed a collapse of the C5 vertebral body and bone fusion between C4 and C5 in the anterior vertebrae, and unilateral VA occlusion was confirmed by angiography. Two-stage surgery was planned to correct the kyphosis. In the first stage, anterior release of the C4/5 bone-spur fusion and dissection of the intervertebral disk were performed. After release, angiography confirmed neither occlusion nor rupture of the VA. In the second stage, anterior and posterior fixation was performed at correcting position while maintaining slight kyphosis in order to avoid excessive distortion of the VA. The postoperative C2-7 kyphosis angle improved to 16° without any VA injury, and the patient could look forward easily.

Discussion: The degree of correction as well as risk management of VAs should be considered carefully during corrective surgery for severe and rigid cervical kyphosis, especially with unilateral VA occlusion.