Abstract

We discuss the incidence of postoperative kyphosis following laminoplasty and its impact on outcomes, as well as critical radiographic parameters, intraoperative technical factors, and postoperative protocols that can be used to improve results. When appropriately selected, cervical laminoplasty is a motion-sparing treatment option for cervical myelopathy and is a valid alternative to laminectomy and fusion procedures. However, like other posterior-based cervical decompression techniques, laminoplasty can cause postoperative kyphosis. A PubMed search was performed to gather articles that focus on cervical deformity in the context of cervical laminoplasty. The reported conversion rates of lordotic to kyphotic cervical alignment after laminoplasty range from 5.2% to 11.3%. Kyphosis likely reduces the benefit from the operation as measured by postoperative mJOA scores. A surgeon can minimize the risk of causing a clinically significant reduction in lordosis by screening out patients with certain radiographic characteristics. Intraoperative decisions such as dissection techniques, levels chosen, and hybrid constructs can preserve the cervical tension band. Certain postoperative protocols can improve cervical posture. Cervical laminoplasty is an effective tool for treating degenerative cervical myelopathy. Careful radiographic screening, intraoperative decision-making, and postoperative protocols can minimize the development of postoperative cervical deformity and improve outcomes. Level V.

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