| Cervical stenosis surgery, Go for early before it’s too late: |
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When we talk about cervical stenosis, we basically refer to degrading bones or narrowing of the bones such as arthritis. Sometimes the cervical spinal wounds may also cause cervical stenosis and the seriousness is generally increases. At times a ruptured disc or cervical fracture that damages the spinal cord or the spinal nerve may be fatal. If the cervical stenosis has compressed the spinal nerves, you may feel pain in the shoulder and the arm. A definite numbness or heaviness can contribute to the arm weakness and thus one would encounter difficulty in grasping things. And if the spinal cord is affected, muscle spasms and leg pain can be felt and this generally results in the uneasy and unsteady walk. Stenosis. Discectomy: In this technique, the vertebrae are taken out along with any bone spines to provide relief to the nerve pressure. This disc is interchange with a bone graft or an artificial vertebrae disc. Cervical discectomy is generally done in the anterior approach. Corpectomy: Vertebra and the intervetebral disc's body is withdrawn widening the spinal canal. Then a bone graft or an artificial hardware is fixed with vertebrae. It is also done in the anterior approach. Laminectomy, laminotomy, laminoplasty: The lamina bone is located at the back of the vertebra. Laminectomy is a surgical process through which it is removed. The partial removal for the widening of the nerve canal comes under laminotomy and the repairment is called laminoplasty. These surgeries can be done in the posterior approach and sometimes endoscopy can be used. Facetectomy: The part that comes between the two vertebrae is called facet joint and the removal of that part is done through facetectomy. A surgery may provide relief to the symptoms of cervical stenosis but complete treatment is impossible. Since the symptoms are generally not noticeable in the beginning and when they are noticed, it is too late and some nerves acquire permanent damage. |