Proprioceptive ability is impaired in patients with cervical myelopathy. Position sense can be assessed by measuring the angular error when reproducing criterion positions, and the results may reflect the severity of cervical myelopathy. Thus, the present method of measuring proprioception is easy to perform and useful for quantitative assessment of the severity of cervical myelopathy.
Knee proprioception was impaired in cervical myelopathy and recovered after surgical posterior decompression. Proprioceptive improvement at 2 weeks correlates with the degree of improvement in JOA scores at 2 years after surgery.
Synovial cysts of the cervical spine occur infrequently in the spinal canal and are most often associated with degenerative facet joints. Despite the prevalence of degenerative spinal disease, symptomatic synovial cysts are extremely uncommon. We report a rare case that showed an exacerbation of a cervical radiculopathy due to an acute expansion of the synovial cyst. Magnetic resonance (MR) images originally revealed a small cystic extradural lesion when the patient presented with neck pain and slightly numbness in the right hand. The patient's complaints subsequently subsided after administration of pain killers. However, 2 weeks after this, the patient experienced a spontaneous, sudden, severe radiating pain into the right arm without any accompanying cervical injury. MR images showed that the cyst had become markedly increased in size in the intervening 4 weeks and compressed the spinal cord laterally. Because the arm pain was so severe and neurologic examinations revealed the paralysis of the C8 nerve root, the synovial cyst was excised surgically and a good clinical outcome achieved. Thus, even if symptoms are mild and the size of the synovial cyst is small, acute expansion of the cyst might be rarely observed and careful management, including surgical consideration, is needed.
The knees of 72 patients with unilateral anteriorcruciate-ligament (ACL) injury were analyzed before ACL reconstruction as well as by follow-up arthroscopy on the day of staple removal. At ACL reconstruction 31 lateral menisci and 40 medial menisci were found to be normal. 28 lateral menisci and 24 medial menisci were treated surgically, while 13 lateral menisci and 8 medial menisci with small or incomplete meniscal tearing were not treated.At follow-up arthroscopy there were 3 new cases of lateral meniscal tearing and 3 new cases of medial meniscal tearing in the groups diagnosed as normal prior to surgery. Two of the 13 cases with small or incomplete lateral meniscal tearing required resection, 8 healed and the other 3 demonstrated no progressive change. Four of the 8 cases with small or incomplete medial meniscal tears healed, 3 exhibited no progressive change and one required surgical treatment. There was no correlation between meniscal tearing and knee instability as indicated by a positive Lachman test or a positive pivot shift sign.The results of the present study indicate that ACL reconstruction prevents progressive changes in meniscal tears and will prevent secondary osteoarthritis, and that some small tears of the lateral meniscus require no surgical treatment.
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