Abstract
We studied the influence of surgeon experience, number of levels operated and level of the lower mortise on acute graft extrusion in patients undergoing uninstrumented one-level to three-level central corpectomy (CC) for cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM) or ossified posterior longitudinal ligament (OPLL). Between 1992 and 2005, 410 consecutive patients underwent one-level to three-level CC with autologous iliac (in one-level and two-level corpectomy) or fibular (in three-level corpectomy) graft. The surgeon’s experience was divided into four eras (I-IV; three eras of 100 consecutive patients each and the fourth with the last 110 patients). Eight patients (1.95%) experienced acute graft migration and seven required re-exploration. The graft extrusion rate in the first era was significantly higher than in the other three eras (6%, 1%, 1%, 0%; p = 0.01) implying a significant learning curve. The extrusion rates for one-level, two-level and three-level CC were not significantly different (3%, 1.6%, 0% respectively; p = 0.3). The extrusion rate for grafts ending in the C7 body (3/230, 1.6%) was not significantly different from the data for grafts ending in other bodies (5/180, 2.8%) ( p = 0.23). There is a low incidence of acute graft migration in patients undergoing uninstrumented CC with autologous bone grafts with a significant learning curve in avoiding graft extrusion.
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