Surgical Outcomes of Dysphagia Provoked by Diffuse Idiopathic Skeletal Hyperostosis in the Cervical Spine
- 저자
- Chung Young-Soo
; Zhang Ho-Yeol
; Ha Yoon
; Park Jeong-Yoon
- 키워드 (영문)
- diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis; dysphagia; osteophyte; surgery; soft tissue; plain radiographs; medicine; fixation (histology); correlation test; cervical spine; cervical decompression; anterior osteophytes
- 발행연도
- 2020-04
- 발행기관
- 연세대학교
- 유형
- Article
- 초록
- Purpose: This study aimed to predict the surgical outcomes of diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH)-related dysphagia (DISH-phagia) and to evaluate the importance of prevertebral soft tissue thickness (PVST).
Materials and Methods: In total, 21 surgeries (anterior osteophytectomy or anterior cervical decompression and fixation) were included in this study for DISH-phagia from 2003 to 2019. Clinical outcomes were assessed using the Dysphagia Outcome and Severity Scale (DOSS) preoperatively, at 1 month postoperatively, and last follow up (mean 29.5 months). PVST was measured using lateral plain radiographs. Paired t-test and Spearman's correlation test was used to identify relationships between various PVST indices and DOSS.
Results: Comparisons were made from 17 patients out of 21, in which the record had all of three measurements. The narrowest PVST preoperatively was 2.55±0.90 mm, with a DOSS score of 4.47±1.61, and that at 1 month after surgery was 5.02±2.33 mm, with a DOSS score of 6.12±1.32. At last follow up, PVST and DOSS values were 3.78±0.92 mm and 5.82±1.34, and three patients experienced symptom relapse. Significant relationships were found between PVST and DOSS at all time points: before surgery (R=0.702, p<0.001), 1 month after surgery (R=0.539, p=0.012), and last follow up (R=0.566, p=0.020).
Conclusion: Surgical removal of anterior osteophytes is an effective treatment option for DISH-phagia, and PVST is a useful parameter in DISH-phagia. The goal of DISH surgery should be to remove DISH as much as possible to ensure sufficient PVST postoperatively.
- 저널명
- Yonsei medical jounal
- 저널정보
- (2020-04). Yonsei medical jounal, Vol.61(4), 341–348
- ISSN
- 0513-5796
- DOI
- 10.3349/ymj.2020.61.4.341
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