Abstract

This is a prospective cohort study. To evaluate the effect of cervical decompression surgery on the biomechanics of the spine and lower extremities in cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM) patients and compare with asymptomatic controls. Difficulties with balance and gait are one of the most common manifestations of CSM. Patients with CSM have a slower gait speed, prolonged double support duration, and reduced cadence compared with healthy controls. Surgical decompression was found to improve clinical outcomes, but conflicting results are noted when examining function. In total, 25 subjects with symptomatic CSM underwent clinical gait analysis performed a week before (pre) and 3 months after the surgery (post). Clinical gait analysis was performed on 30 matched asymptomatic controls as well. Spine and lower extremity kinematics, spatiotemporal parameters, and clinical outcome were measured. CSM patients demonstrated slower walking speed (P=0.006), reduced cadence (P=0.001), longer step time (P=0.013) wider step width (P=0.001), greater ankle range of motion (ROM) (P=0.019), less hip ROM (P=0.050), increased pelvis (P=0.001), and lumbar spine (P=0.049) ROM compared with controls. Postoperatively CSM patients demonstrated a faster walking speed (P=0.002), increased cadence (P=0.029), longer step length (P=0.015), narrower step width (P=0.004), greater knee (P=0.043), and hip ROM (P=0.007), less pelvis (P=0.002), lumbar spine (P=0.035), and cervical spine (P=0.044) ROM, and improved clinical outcomes (neck pain disability index questionnaire, oswestry disability index, and visual analog scale; P=0.001) compared with their preoperative values. Postsurgical CSM patients did not present with any differences compared with controls, beside pelvis ROM (P=0.019). Preoperatively, CSM patients clearly showed altered gait parameters compared with controls. However, after cervical decompression surgery, CSM patients exhibited improved gait pattern, spatiotemporal parameters, spine and lower extremity ROM, as well as patient-reported outcomes. Postoperatively, CSM patients did not show major differences in gait when compared with matched asymptomatic controls.

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