Abstract

Cervical deformity (CD) is a kind of disorder influencing cervical alignment. Although the incidence of CD is not high, this deformity can cause not only pain but also difficulties in daily activities such as swallowing and maintaining upright position. Even though the common cause of cervical deformity is still controversial, previous studies divided CD into congenital deformity and secondary deformity; secondary deformity includes iatrogenic and noniatrogenic deformity according to pathogenic factors. Due to the lack of relevant studies, a standardized evaluation for CD is absent. Even though the assessment of preoperative condition and surgical planning mainly rely on personal experience, the evaluation methods could still be summarized from previous studies. The objective in this article is to summarize studies on cervical scoliosis, identify clinical problems, and provide directions for researchers interested in delving deep into this specific topic. In this review, we found that the lack of standard classification system could lead to an absence of clinical guidance; in addition, the osseous landmarks and vascular distributions could be variable in CD patients, which might cause the risk of vascular or neurological complications; furthermore, multiple deformities were usually presented in CD patients, which might cause chain reaction after the correction of CD; this would prevent surgeons from choosing realignment surgery that is effective but risky.

Highlights

  • Cervical deformity (CD) is always defined as a kind of disorder influencing cervical alignment. It is commonly associated with increased tension and anterior pressure in the spinal cord, and myelopathy occurs; a patient can be diagnosed with CD if his Cobb angle of the cervical spine is over 10°, which is similar to thoracic and lumbar scoliosis [1]

  • The deficient number of cases combined with heterogeneity and multiplicity of symptoms makes it very difficult to conduct a large-sample study discussing CD

  • Most CD patients do not have obvious symptoms, which will limit the statistical analysis of CD in general population

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical deformity (CD) is always defined as a kind of disorder influencing cervical alignment. It is commonly associated with increased tension and anterior pressure in the spinal cord, and myelopathy occurs; a patient can be diagnosed with CD if his Cobb angle of the cervical spine is over 10°, which is similar to thoracic and lumbar scoliosis [1]. Considering complicated etiology, highly variable clinical manifestation, and risky operations, the assessment and treatment of CD remain a complicated problem for spine surgeons. The objective in this article is to summarize studies on CD, identify clinical problems, and provide directions for researchers interested in delving deep into this specific topic

Pathological Features
Clinical Assessment
Treatment Methods
Complications
Conclusions
Findings
Conflicts of Interest
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