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Save the Date! NW Surgical Research Foundation Conference March 2018

Join us at the NW Surgical Research Foundation Conference in March 2018 at ReboundMD. Learn about the causes and treatments of neck and arm pain from Brian Ragel, MD.

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Save the Date! NW Surgical Research Foundation Conference March 2018

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  1. Save the Date! NW Surgical Research Foundation Conference March 2018 @ReboundMD facebook.com/ReboundMD/

  2. Causes and Treatmentsof Neck and Arm Pain Brian Ragel, MD

  3. No conflicts of interest • No disclosures • I can never do less, I can always do more

  4. Introduction • Anatomy • Definitions • Cervical spondylosis • Herniated disc • Cases • Axial neck pain • Radiculopathy • Myelopathy

  5. Cervical Spondylosis • “wear and tear” over time • Facet arthropy • “bone spurs” / osteophytes • loss of disc height • mineral deposition within ligaments and discs

  6. Imaging: Cervical Spondylosis

  7. Imaging: Cervical Spondylosis

  8. Imaging: Cervical Spondylosis Degenerative changes that contribute to spinal cord/nerve root compression

  9. Axial Neck Pain Case • 45 yo F • Neck pain x 2 years, following MVC. • Mid-cervical spine pain • Has tried everything. • Exam • Paraspinous tenderness • Non-focal neuro exam • Imaging • X-rays: AP/lat/flex/ex, normal • MRI: mild DDD at C6/7

  10. Axial Neck Pain • DFN: pain in neck and upper trapezius pain without radicular symptoms • usually mechanical component • 66% of all adults will suffer • Imaging studies correlate poorly • Sx?pain generator? • Nerve endings • Disc • Periosteum • Facets • Paraspinous muscles

  11. Diagram: Nerve Endings for Axial Pain * * * *

  12. Axial Neck Pain • Imaging Indications: • h/o trauma • h/o cancer • progressive neck pain • on-going neck pain > 2 months • Imaging: • X-ray (AP/lat/flex/ex) r/o fracture, instability, lytic/blastic lesion • CT C-spine r/o fracture (h/o trauma) • MRI r/o tumor, spinal cord compression 61 yo F w/ h/o breast cancer and progressive neck pain.

  13. Axial Neck Pain • Tx* • Exercise: strengthen and stretch • OTCs (Tylenol / NSAIDs) • Talk therapy (cognitive specialist) • Heat • Sleeping right – back or side (change pillow, collar, bed) • Physical therapy • Acupuncture • Chiropractor • Tx, limited success* • Injections (steroids ~3 mo; ablations ~1 yr) • Surgery *Best Relief for Neck Pain, Consumer Reports, 2015 and 2016

  14. Surgery for Axial Neck Pain • Pain relief 21 – 45% • Partial pain relief 25 – 55% • No relief 22 – 32% • Overall, for axial neck pain, surgery 50/50 at best, no good exam, no good imaging modality to define pain generator site. • I utilize SPECT/CT in some cases. *Lees, Rothman, Deplama, Gore.

  15. Axial Neck Pain Case • 45 yo F, chronic neck pain after MVC. • Failed conservative measures • Imaging • CT C-spin, no fracture • Consider Hybrid SPECT/CT, metabolic study

  16. Axial Neck Pain • Arthritis can be persistent source of pain. • Facet arthritis, 39% pts w/ neck pain. • Hybrid SPECT/CT • Single Positron Computed Tomography (SPECT) • Nuclear study, Gamma emitting nucleotide • IV 99mTc-medronic acid (phosphate derivative) • Taken up by osteoblasts, • Imaged w/ gamma camera • CT scan screen merged w/ gamma counts • Matar et. al., 72 patients, 25 cervical • Identified potential pain generator sites in 92% and 86% of cervical and lumbar scans, respectively • Can, focus treatments at areas high uptake

  17. Axial Neck Pain Case • 45 yo F, chronic neck pain after MVC. • Failed conservative measures • NSAIDs / PT / Chiro / Acupuncture • Facet blocks • Imaging • Hybrid SPECT/CT, normal • NO surgery offered. • Next?: • Encourage pain counseling • ?Consider arthritic w/u? • ?Refer for facet denervation procedure? • ?Spinal cord stimulator? NO, not good for axial neck pain, best for arm pain • F/u 1 year – re-image

  18. Conclusion: Axial Neck Pain • Imaging: r/o fracture, instability, tumor. • Surgery: No good surgical option. • Treatment: non-surgical! • My practice: • “Sorry, surgery won’t help.” • In pts w/ little secondary gain and willing try – offer 1 yr f/u. • I have performed ACDF’s for axial neck pain w/ mixed results. • I have offered patients fusion w/ facet arthropathy on SPECT/CT surgery, 1 taker.

  19. Cervical Radiculopathy Case • 45 yo M • Neck and right arm pain x 6 weeks • Deltoid to bicep to lateral forearm to thumb • Exam • 4+/5 biceps • diminished LT thumb

  20. Cervical Radiculopathy • Sx • Sx’s in dermatomal distribution from compressed nerve root • Example: C6 radiculopathy will produce pain/numbness in lateral biceps -> lateral forearm -> thumb • Dx • Sensory: ask patient to self diagram • Motor: C5 deltoid, C6 biceps, C7 triceps • MRI

  21. Cervical Radiculopathy • Tx, non-surgical • OTCs • Rx: Neurontin and Lyrica • Physical therapy / cervical traction • Goal: strength and stretch • Epidural steroid injections • Chiropractic • I do not advise high velocity manipulation • Acupuncture

  22. Cervical Radiculopathy • Surgical Indications • Life-limiting pain • Pain > 2 months • Progressive motor deficit • Tx, surgical • Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion (ACDF) • Artificial Cervical Disc Replacement (ACR) • Posterior Cervical Foraminotomy

  23. Cervical Radiculopathy Case, F/U 2 months • 45 yo M, weakness improved, but R C6 arm pain continues. • NSAIDs, gabapentin, PT x 3 wks, ESI • Exam: • full strength • diminished LT R C6 • Decision: offered surgery, ACDF/ACR

  24. Insurance: Surgery Authorization Criteria • Molina utilizes McKesson InterQual - Evidence Based Clinical Criteria • Surgery algorithms • Example: Surgery approval algorithm for cervical disc herniation w/ unilateral symptoms

  25. Insurance: Surgery Authorization Criteria X X

  26. Insurance: Surgery Authorization Criteria X X

  27. Insurance: Surgery Authorization Criteria X Pt w/ only 3 wks PT. Surgery denied? X X X

  28. Insurance: Surgery Authorization Criteria X Pt w/ only 3 wks PT. Surgery denied? DENIED, until documented 6 wks home exercise. X X X X X X

  29. Cervical Radiculopathy • Outcomes: • >80% pts w/ arm relief • ACR/ACDF risks • Dysphagia, ~5% • hoarse voice, ~5% • C5 or C6 nerve palsy, ~1% • adjacent level breakdown, ~1-2%/yr (~25% pts sx in10 yr) • ACR • ACR ~20% undergo ACDF • ACR ~30% fuse • Recovery • Return to work 2 – 4 wks

  30. Cervical Radiculopathy Case, F/U 4 wks after C6/7 ACR • 45 yo M • R arm pain resolved • intermittent tingling down arm • discomfort b/w shoulder blades • Exam: • full strength • diminished LT R C6 • F/u 6 months, annually w/ x-rays • Risks: symptomatic adjacent level disc disease ~1-2% yr, ~20% at decade.

  31. 270 ACDR vs. 219 ACDF • Equivalent: • >80% relief neck pain • >80% relief arm pain • Motion preserved • Unclear if ACDR diminishes risk symptomatic adjacent level disc diseasae

  32. Conclusion: Cervical Radiculopathy • Surgical Indications • Life-limiting pain • Pain > 2 months • Progressive motor deficit • Surgery • ACDF or ACDR excellent outcomes in neck and arm pain relief

  33. Cervical Myelopathy Case • 65 yo M • Presents increasing falls, clumsy hands, and upper extremity tingling for past 2 years • Exam: • 4+/5 triceps and grip • +Hoffman’s sign, up-going toes • Mild ataxia w/ heel-to-toe walk

  34. Cervical Myelopathy • Sx • Sx’s N/T, clumsy hands, spastic gait, leg weakness due to spinal cord compression • Sx / Dx • Upper Motor Neuron signs (Myelopathy) • Upgoing toes (Babinski) • Finger flexor reflex (Hoffman’s sign) • Spastic gait • Imaging: MRI, damaged spinal cord (cord signal noted on T2WI)

  35. Natural History of Cervical Myelopathy • Lees and Turners • usually stable non-progressive disability • progressive deterioration exception • Symon et al, 67% steady decline • Nonrandomized MCT in 2000 • 20 surgery with improved function • 23 non-op with decline in ADL

  36. Natural History of Mild Cervical Myelopathy • Study, 60 patients w/ mild CM (JOA score >13) • 30% decline in stair-step fashion • 70% tolerate

  37. Cervical Myelopathy • Surgical Goal: decompress spinal cord to halt progression of symptoms • Surgical Indications: • Progressive symptoms • Cord signal on MRI • Patient choice if mild • Surgery: • Anterior decompressive surgery for anterior compression / kyphosis • Posterior decompression for degenerative / congenital stenosis

  38. Cervical Myelopathy 65yo M w/ severe cervical myelopathy. MRI, severe anterior compression. Example: C4/5, C5/6 and C6/7 ACDF d/t anterior compression.

  39. Cervical Myelopathy 82yo M w/ increasing gait disturbance. MRI, cord signal change. Example: Posterior laminoplasty w/ lateral mass expansion hardware for congenital stenosis with cervical myelopathy

  40. Outcome: Cervical Myelopathy • Short-term: • Improved gait • Return proximal strength • Long-term complaints: • c/o grip weakness • c/o balance issues • c/o UE Paresthesia's (gabapentin) • Risk: 10% patients have neurologically worse following surgery

  41. Summary • Axial neck pain, no good surgical options. • Cervical radiculopathy, excellent surgical options to relieve arm pain. • Cervical stenosis with myelopathy, good surgical options to stop progressive neurologic decline.

  42. Save the Date! NW Surgical Research Foundation Conference March 2018 @ReboundMD facebook.com/ReboundMD/

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