Abstract

Study Design:Cross-sectional survey.Objectives:Degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) is a common syndrome of acquired spinal cord impairment caused by canal stenosis secondary to arthritic changes of the spine. International guidelines consider physiotherapy an option for mild, stable DCM; however, few studies have been conducted on nonoperative management. The objective was to determine current usage and perceptions of nonoperative physiotherapy for DCM.Methods:Persons with DCM were recruited to a web-based survey. Participants with complete responses that had not received surgery were included (n = 167). Variables included symptom duration, treatment history, current disability, and demographic characteristics.Results:Disease and demographic characteristics were equivalent between those who did and did not receive physiotherapy. In all, 19.5% of physiotherapy recipients reported subjective benefit from physiotherapy. Those perceiving benefit had significantly higher mJOA (modified Japanese Orthopaedic Association) scores, lower neck pain scores, and shorter symptom duration. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, those with mild DCM were more likely to perceive benefit than those with severe DCM, as were those with moderate DCM (to a lesser extent). Individuals whose diagnosis was delayed 1 to 2 years were less likely to perceive benefit than those that waited 0 to 6 months.Conclusions:The provision of nonoperative physiotherapy in the management of DCM is inconsistent and appears to differ from international guidelines. Few patients perceived benefit from physiotherapy; however, this was more likely in those with mild DCM and in those with shorter symptom durations. Further work is needed to establish the appropriate role of physiotherapy for this population.

Highlights

  • Degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) is a progressive neurological condition, characterized by symptomatic cervical cord compression secondary to age-related changes in the cervical spine.[1]

  • Further work is needed to establish the appropriate role of physiotherapy for this population

  • DCM is the commonest spinal cord disorder worldwide,[1] with up to 5% prevalence estimated in individuals aged older than 40 years

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Summary

Introduction

Degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) is a progressive neurological condition, characterized by symptomatic cervical cord compression secondary to age-related changes in the cervical spine.[1] DCM is the commonest spinal cord disorder worldwide,[1] with up to 5% prevalence estimated in individuals aged older than 40 years. An increase in prevalence and disease burden from DCM is anticipated. The cervical spinal cord processes and transmits information between the brain and the body. Abnormal function of the spinal cord causes diverse symptoms including pain, paresthesia, weakness, unsteadiness, frequent falls, loss of dexterity and incontinence.[2] This substantially impacts quality of life; one recent study found people with DCM have among the worst health-related quality of life (Short Form–36 [SF-36]) scores of any chronic disease.[3]

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