Abstract

Ventrolateral cervicotomy provides a narrowed working space for surgical management of upper thoracic spine. We report our experience about ventral upper thoracic spinal cord decompression with reconstruction and plating via the cervicomanubrial route. Six patients (24 to 75 years old) were operated on by the same operator (LN) by cervicomanubriotomy from 2002 to 2007 for upper thoracic spinal cord compression (one case of Pott's disease, three cases of metastases, one fracture, one invasive hemangio-epithelioma), with a good outcome in five patients. Lesions were located from the cervicothoracic junction down to the fourth thoracic vertebra (T4). In all cases, anterior spinal cord decompression, strut graft reconstruction (iliac bone in two cases, cement in four cases) and osteosynthesis were performed. In two cases, a second stage posterior decompression with fixation was performed. The approach begins by a left sided anterior cervicotomy, medial to the sternocleidomastoid muscle and lateral to the trachea and esophagus, associated with division of the infrahyoid muscles close to their insertion at the upper thoracic outlet followed by osteotomy of the manubrium sterni. Then, division of the thyropericardic fascia and thymus, control of the brachiocephalic vein, control of the thoracic lymphatic duct and the horizontal thoracic aorta are performed. The ventral part of fifth cervical vertebra body down to T4 is then exposed between the left primitive carotid artery laterally, the esophagus medially and the thoracic aorta caudally. Compared to total sternotomy without or with clavicle resection, cervicomanubriotomy seems to be a less aggressive, safe and reliable procedure.

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