Abstract

BackgroundFocally increased spinal cord motion at the level of cervical spinal stenosis has been revealed by phase-contrast MRI (PC-MRI). ObjectiveTo investigate spinal cord motion among patients suffering of degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) across the entire cervical spine applying automated segmentation and standardized PC-MRI post-processing protocols. MethodsProspective, matched-pair controlled trial on 29 patients with stenosis at C5/C6. MRI-protocol covering all cervical segments: 3D T2-SPACE, prospectively ECG-triggered sagittal PC-MRI. Segmentation by trained 3D hierarchical deep convolutional neural network and data processing were conducted via in-house software pipeline. Parameters per segment: maximum velocity, peak-to-peak (PTP)-amplitude, total displacement, PTP-amplitudeHB (PTP-amplitude per duration of heartbeat), and, for characterization of intraindividual alterations, the PTP-amplitude index between the cervical segments C3/C4–C7/T1 and C2/C3. ResultsSpinal cord motion was increased at C4/C5, C5/C6 and C6/C7 among patients (all parameters, p < 0.001–0.025). The PTP-amplitude index revealed an increase from C3/C4 to C4/C5 (p = 0.002), C4/C5 to C5/C6 (p = 0.037) and a decrease from C5/C6 to C6/C7 and C6/C7 to C7/T1 (p < 0.001, each). This implied an up-building stretch on spinal cord tissue cranial and a mechanical compression caudal of the stenotic level. Furthermore, significant far range effects across the entire cervical spinal cord were observed (e.g. PTP-amplitude C2/C3 vs. C6/C7, p = 0.026) in contrast to controls (p = 1.00). ConclusionThis study revealed the nature and extends of mechanical stress on the entire cervical spinal cord tissue due to focal stenosis. These pathophysiological alterations of spinal cord motion can be expected to be clinically relevant.

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