To graft or not to graft: rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy.

Anterior cervical discectomy has been performed for almost 50 years. Initially, bone grafts were used routinely, but soon their necessity was questioned. It remains disputed to this day. The aim was to establish whether there are grounds for basing choice of technique on individual patient data. The...

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Main Authors: White, B, Fitzgerald, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2005
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author White, B
Fitzgerald, J
author_facet White, B
Fitzgerald, J
author_sort White, B
collection OXFORD
description Anterior cervical discectomy has been performed for almost 50 years. Initially, bone grafts were used routinely, but soon their necessity was questioned. It remains disputed to this day. The aim was to establish whether there are grounds for basing choice of technique on individual patient data. The cervical spine radiographs of 148 patients who had undergone grafted or ungrafted anterior cervical discectomy were reviewed and changes in geometry at the operated level were measured. These data were then examined for any correlation between preoperative geometry, choice of operative technique and adverse clinical outcome. Disturbances to spinal geometry after ungrafted discectomy are minimal at disc heights below 4 mm. At and above 4 mm significant settlement and angulation occur. Complications in our series were fewer where small disc spaces were left ungrafted and larger ones grafted. Disc spaces below 4 mm should not be grafted, but spaces of 4 mm or more should.
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spelling oxford-uuid:eecb4158-0fbe-4d72-a325-7588c0bfd2f12022-03-27T11:35:27ZTo graft or not to graft: rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:eecb4158-0fbe-4d72-a325-7588c0bfd2f1EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2005White, BFitzgerald, JAnterior cervical discectomy has been performed for almost 50 years. Initially, bone grafts were used routinely, but soon their necessity was questioned. It remains disputed to this day. The aim was to establish whether there are grounds for basing choice of technique on individual patient data. The cervical spine radiographs of 148 patients who had undergone grafted or ungrafted anterior cervical discectomy were reviewed and changes in geometry at the operated level were measured. These data were then examined for any correlation between preoperative geometry, choice of operative technique and adverse clinical outcome. Disturbances to spinal geometry after ungrafted discectomy are minimal at disc heights below 4 mm. At and above 4 mm significant settlement and angulation occur. Complications in our series were fewer where small disc spaces were left ungrafted and larger ones grafted. Disc spaces below 4 mm should not be grafted, but spaces of 4 mm or more should.
spellingShingle White, B
Fitzgerald, J
To graft or not to graft: rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy.
title To graft or not to graft: rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy.
title_full To graft or not to graft: rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy.
title_fullStr To graft or not to graft: rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy.
title_full_unstemmed To graft or not to graft: rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy.
title_short To graft or not to graft: rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy.
title_sort to graft or not to graft rationalizing choice in anterior cervical discectomy
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