Cervical spinal fusions — How does the number of fused levels affect quality of life? 5 key notes

A new article published in Spine examines the range-of-motion and health-related quality of life for cervical fusion patients.

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The researchers examined 105 patients who were enrolled in the study. There were 35 patients who underwent single-level anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; 41 patients underwent two-level procedures and 28 patients underwent three- or more-level surgery.

 

The researchers found:

 

1. There weren’t decreases in the C2-7 motion among the patients who underwent one-level fusion.

 

2. There was an average seven-degree decrease in motion among the patients who had two levels fused. Among the three-levels fused patients there was a 18-degree difference.

 

3. For patients who had four- or more-levels fused there was a 22-degree decrease in range of motion.

 

4. The number of fused levels didn’t have an impact on the radiographic adjacent segment pathology.

 

5. There was a significant correlation between the number of levels fused and the health-related quality of life scores. The cervical range-of-motion and C2-7 sagittal vertical axis didn’t show a significant correlation between the number of levels fused.

 

More articles on spine surgery:
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10 spine, neurosurgeons on the move
5 key notes on unilateral extraforaminal lumbar interbody fusion outcomes

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