APPLICATION OF ANTERIOR MINI-INCISION VERTEBROPLASTY IN CERVICAL METASTASES
GUAN SHI, HAO CHEN, PU JIA, LI BAO, FEI FENG

TL;DR
This study shows that a minimally invasive surgical technique can safely and effectively relieve pain in patients with cervical spine metastases.
Contribution
Demonstrates the safety and efficacy of anterior mini-incision vertebroplasty for cervical metastases treatment.
Findings
All seven surgeries were successful with no major complications.
Pain scores significantly decreased postoperatively with minimal cement leakage.
Patients showed stable surgical outcomes with no worsening of pain symptoms.
Abstract
To investigate the efficacy and safety of anterior cervical mini-incision vertebroplasty in the treatment of vertebral metastases. From July 2009 to March 2013, seven cases of vertebral metastases were treated by using vertebroplasty through an anterior cervical paratracheal mini-incision guided by C-arm X-ray in Beijing friendship hospital, Capital medical university. Among them, three were male and four were female, aged 51 to 74 years with an average age of 61.7 years. Preoperative and postoperative Visual Analog Scale (VAS) scores and analgesic medication usage were evaluated, and postoperative pain relief was assessed using the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria. All seven surgeries were successful without any occurrences of complications such as nerve or vascular injury, pulmonary embolism, or hematoma. The average cement injection volume was 1.8ml, and postoperative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpinal Fractures and Fixation Techniques · Pelvic and Acetabular Injuries · Management of metastatic bone disease
