• Eur Spine J · Dec 2012

    Neurological improvement and prognosis after occipito-thoracic fusion in patients with mutilating-type rheumatoid arthritis.

    • Tetsu Tanouchi, Takachika Shimizu, Keisuke Fueki, Masatake Ino, Naofumi Toda, Yasunori Tatara, and Nodoka Manabe.
    • Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Gunma Spine Center (Harunaso Hospital), 878-1 Kamitoyooka, Takasaki, Gunma 370-0871, Japan. teztano@gmail.com
    • Eur Spine J. 2012 Dec 1;21(12):2506-11.

    IntroductionMutilating-type rheumatoid arthritis, the most aggressive type of rheumatoid arthritis, is frequently associated with destructive cervical involvement, both at the high-cervical and subaxial levels, causing significant neurological deficit, and their natural course of the disease and the survival are discouraging. For such cases, we have been actively performing occipito-thoracic fusion since 1991. Although medical treatment for rheumatoid patients has represented a marked improvement, it could not treat all of these patients because of several reasons. Therefore, it is still important to evaluate the past treatment results.MethodsWe investigated the neurological improvement and prognosis in 51 mutilating-type rheumatoid arthritis patients who underwent occipito-thoracic fusion between 1991 and 2010. The neurological status was evaluated using modified Ranawat classification; class IIIB was subdivided into IIIBa (able to sit upright) and IIIBb (bedridden).ResultsThe preoperative neurologic status was IIIBa in 19 patients and IIIBb in 17 patients. 15 of the 19 patients with class IIIBa improved to being able to walk (79 %), whereas only 3 of the 17 patients with class IIIBb improved to being able to walk (18 %) after surgery. Of the 51 patients, 28 died during follow-up; the mean age at death was 67.2 years. The postoperative 5- and 10-year survival rates were 60.3 and 26.4 %, respectively.ConclusionThe neurological improvement and prognosis after surgery was poorer in class IIIBb patients than in the other patient groups. Occipito-thoracic fusion can improve the neurological symptoms and prognosis. However, early surgical intervention is recommended, before a patient becomes bedridden (class IIIBb).

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