Surgical treatment of concomitant atlantoaxial instability and subaxial spondylotic stenosis in rheumatoid arthritis-a case report.

2021 
INTRODUCTION This case report details the surgical treatment of an RA patient who presented with concomitant AAI and subaxial spondylotic stenosis and was subsequently treated via a C1-2 screw-rod construct, semispinalis cervicis sparing C3 laminectomy, and C4-C7 laminoplasty. Our case report is the first to describe a surgical approach for treatment of concomitant AAI and subaxial spondylotic stenosis in a patient with RA. CASE PRESENTATION A 66-year-old male with a history of rheumatoid arthritis and atlantoaxial instability presented to an outpatient spine clinic with complaints of neck pain and worsening gait imbalance. A flexion-extension MRI revealed compression of the posterior aspect of the C1 ring on the back of the spinal cord during flexion, resulting in cord deformation; subaxial spondylosis with moderate associated stenosis and congenital narrowing from C3-7; and central cord compression with T2 signal change at C5-6. A C1-2 arthrodesis was performed and the subaxial spinal cord was then decompressed by performing a seminspinalis-sparing C3 laminectomy, C4-6 laminoplasties, and C7 dome laminectomy. Follow-up flexion-extension radiographs demonstrated satisfactory hardware position at C1-2 and full range of motion at C3-7. DISCUSSION This is the first study to describe the surgical management of an RA patient with concomitant AAS and subaxial spondylotic stenosis. Patients with these simultaneous pathologies can be considered for decompression caudal to the C1-2 arthrodesis, though they should be adequately counseled regarding the risk of developing SAS requiring subsequent fusion.
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