Interdisciplinary Neurosurgery (Dec 2021)

A case report of simultaneous surgery for concurrent symptomatic carotid artery and cervical spinal stenosis

  • Mark M. Zaki,
  • Matthew J. Koch,
  • Aman B. Patel,
  • Ganesh M. Shankar

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
p. 101348

Abstract

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Symptomatic cervical spinal stenosis and carotid artery stenosis are common neurosurgical diseases, but little is known about the management of their concurrent presentation. We present a 62 year-old woman with a precipitous decline in bilateral lower extremity strength, dexterity, and gait, and a 2-year history of amaurosis fugax. She was found to have cervical stenosis at C5-C7 with cord compression, lumbar stenosis at L3-L5 with a right L4-L5 synovial cyst, and moderate right internal carotid artery stenosis of 50–70%. The patient underwent a staged procedure. Stage 1 was a simultaneous right carotid endarterectomy and C6 corpectomy with C5-C7 anterior fusion. Stage 2 was a C3-T1 posterior decompression and fusion and L3-L5 decompression with synovial cyst removal. The presentation of concurrent cervical stenosis and CAS is likely underappreciated. Deciding between simultaneous or staged CEA and spinal decompression should be based on a careful risk-benefit assessment and tailored to the relative severity of symptoms, patient anatomy and comorbidities.

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