LONG-TERM FOLLOW-UP OF CHIARI-RELATED SYRINGOMYELIA IN ADULTS

Author:

Aghakhani Nozar1,Parker Fabrice1,David Philippe1,Morar Silvia1,Lacroix Catherine1,Benoudiba Farida2,Tadie Marc1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Bicêtre University Hospital, Bicêtre, France

2. Department of Neuroradiology, Bicêtre University Hospital, Bicêtre, France

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE To determine the long-term outcome of surgically treated Chiari-related syringomyelia. METHODS The medical charts of 157 consecutive surgically treated patients with Chiari-related syringomyelia were retrospectively analyzed. Factors predicting outcome, either clinical or radiological, are discussed, and our results are compared with those of other large series in the literature. RESULTS The study included 74 men and 83 women (age range, 16–75 years; mean age at surgery, 38.3 years). Pain and sensory disturbance were the most frequent initial symptoms. The average duration of preoperative symptoms was 8.2 years. The follow-up period ranged from 82 to 204 months (median, 88 months). At the end of the study, 99 patients (63.06%) had improved, 48 (30.58%) had stabilized, 9 (5.73%) had worsened, and 1 (0.63%) had died during the postoperative period. Factors predicting improvement or stabilization were young age at the time of surgery and clinical signs of paroxysmal intracranial hypertension. Factors associated with a poor outcome were older age at the time of surgery, arachnoiditis, and a clinical feature of long-tract impairment syndrome. The presence of arachnoiditis or of basilar invagination was associated with poor clinical presentation (P = 0.05 and 0.0001, respectively). The extent of the cyst on postoperative magnetic resonance imaging was a predictor of poor clinical outcome (P = 0.002). CONCLUSION Our results confirmed that surgery is an effective and safe treatment of Chiari-related syringomyelia, with a 90% chance of long-term stabilization or improvement on average. Surgery should be proposed as soon as possible in patients with clearly progressing clinical features.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Surgery

Reference40 articles.

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2. Syringomyelia and Chiari abnormality in the adult. Analysis of the results of a cooperative series of 285 cases;Aghakhani;Neurochirurgie,1999

3. Quantitative cine-mode magnetic resonance imaging of Chiari I malformations: An analysis of cerebrospinal fluid dynamics;Armonda;Neurosurgery,1994

4. Surgical treatment of Chiari I malformation with or without syringomyelia;Blagodatsky;Acta Neurochir (Wien),1999

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