Abstract

Upper thoracic myelopathy caused by combined ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament (OPLL) and ossification of the ligamentum flavum (OLF) is relatively rare. This clinical condition is difficult to treat, and a surgical method has not been fully established. We report an extremely rare case of severe thoracic myelopathy caused by concurrent beak-type OPLL and OLF at T1-T2. A 53-year-old woman with paresthesia of both legs and an inability to hold a standing position presented to our hospital. Radiological images showed a large beak-type OPLL at T1-T2 and an OLF at T1-T7. The spinal cord was severely compressed at T1-T2. First, posterior decompression and instrumentation fusion at C6-T4 was performed, with a T1-T2 bilateral parallel gutter along the dural tube into the vertebral bodies covering the extent of the OPLL. Second, anterior decompression of the OPLL with corpectomy of T1-T2 and fusion using iliac bone grafting was performed after the sternal manubrium splitting approach. In the deep operating field of the second surgery, the gutters created during the first surgery were helpful for judging the width and thickness of the OPLL during the anterior decompression procedure. Postoperatively, her neurological symptoms greatly improved, the patient could walk independently, and the Japanese Orthopaedic Association score had improved from 3 preoperatively to 8 at the final follow-up examination at 16 months postoperatively. Two-stage circumferential decompression and fusion surgery can be considered an effective surgical method for upper thoracic concurrent OPLL and OLF. The bilateral gutters created during the first surgery improved the safety and feasibility of this difficult operation.

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