CT-guided high-level percutaneous cervical cordotomy for intractable cancer pain

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Date

2017

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Publisher

Türk Nöroşirürji Derneği

Abstract

AIM: To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of computed tomography-guided high-level percutaneous selective cervical cordotomy (CT-guided HPSCC). MATERIAL and METHODS: CT-guided percutaneous procedures were performed in fifty-nine patients between the years 20042013 for cancer pain. Forty-eight patients with cancer-related body pain were treated with CT-guided HPSCC was evaluated retrospectively. RESULTS: CT-guided HPSCC was performed in 33 male and 15 female patients. The mean age was 49.93 years. The distance between skin-dura, anteroposterior diameter and mediolateral diameter was measured as 40 to 71.1 mm, 8 to 88 mm and 8 to 99 mm respectively. The mean postoperative Karnofsky Performance Score (KPS) was 95. Mean preoperative Visual Analog Scale (VAS) score was 9.6, and 3.6 on postoperative day 1. The 6th month follow-up VAS score was 6.8. Preoperative total sleeping hours in a 24-hour period were 5.5 hours, which increased in the immediate postoperative period to 8.5 hours. The most common pathology treated was bronchogenic carcinoma. Six of the procedures were bilateral and there were no permanent complication due to the procedure. CONCLUSION: CT-guided HPSCC is still very effective, cheap and repetitive procedure for cancer pain. The procedure should be performed by experienced surgeons and although there is a hegemony of opioids, the number of surgeons that perform the procedure must be increased.

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Keywords

Neurosciences & neurology, Surgery, Cancer pain, Cervical cordotomy, Computed tomography-guided cordotomy, Spinal-cord, Selective cordotomy, Interruption

Citation

Bekar, A. vd. (2017). ''CT-guided high-level percutaneous cervical cordotomy for intractable cancer pain''. Turkish Neurosurgery, 27(1), 133-137.

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