Anyone had an Anterior Cervical Corpectomy and Discectomy with Fusion?
My friend is going to be undergoing an Anterior Cervical Corpectomy and Discectomy with Fusion. She is very nervous about this and has been holding off for while as she has sought opinions from several doctors. Here is a recent message she sent me a few days ago when she first told me about it:
"I supposed to have this last year but kept pending it because I was scared oh well I am still sacred:)
Anyway, I did not get better with conservative/traditional treatment. I was diagnosed with Severe Cervical Spinal stenosis on 2018.
I went to 4 different specialist and surgeons (nerve and orthopedic surgeons) from different hospital and all urge me to have the surgery sooner than later to avoid serious conditions later (becoming a paraplegic) so here we are." Just wanted to start a discussion to see if anyone else has had this so I can tell her to join Mayo Connect and maybe get some answers. Specifically what was it like to have the surgery, how long to recover, kinds of complications, anything info that might be useful to someone facing this surgery. Thanks, Hank
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Spine Health Support Group.
Thank-You so much for responding. Your post helps me a lot....and You asked ALOT of good questions that I need to pursue. I will check back here regularly and let you know what I find out.
Thank-You again!!!
@constancebabe I'm glad I could help. Please do check back in and let me know how you are doing. When you ask the right questions, you get your doctors to consider things they may not have thought about. I was able to find the answers to my spine issues when 5 surgeons missed it and had refused to help me because they didn't understand my symptoms. I would look for the next surgeon just in case things didn't work out with a current one and I read their research literature. In doing that, and looking up terminology, I found literature with case studies similar to mine, and I sent that in when I requested to be seen at Mayo. I also watched a lot of surgeons presenting their cases for other surgeons online at conferences, so I understood a lot about spine surgery and that helped me know when I was in front of a good surgeon who understood the issues. It was my Mayo surgeon's paper that had the term I looked up "funicular pain" and his paper referenced leg pain with cervical stenosis, so I knew he would understand. Before I came to Mayo, surgeons were telling me my leg pain and difficulty walking was not related to my spine issue with cord compression at C5/C6 which of course it was. I sent that literature to the last surgeon who refused to help me after I had spine surgery that resolved the issues. I was kind with my letter to him, and never heard from him after that. Still, it was the right thing to do even if he would never admit the error.
I just read a few of your other posts. I hadn't seen those before I answered you, but I did see you had had a brain aneurism and related surgery and an issue with the femoral artery and that past history could be part of the issues you are having with walking and swelling in your legs. It is worth asking about how much that past history could play into your current symptoms and if something has changed. By the same token, you can't assume that is the total picture and need to ask if there are other issues or problems yet undiscovered at the root of the issues that can either be found or ruled out. You might want to consider a second opinion at Mayo and when Mayo analyses a patient with a history of multiple issues, they will retest and reconfirm the findings and collaborate between departments to try to figure out all the issues and which is most important. Mayo has also been doing a lot of research with spinal cord injury patients and walking and they have a lot of specialists.
You can send a private message to another member if you click the envelope icon at the top and type in their name (yours is @constancebabe). You can share information there. With a public forum, it is for everyone's safety not to share personal information in public or imaging that shows personal information on it.
Hello @constancebabe and welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. You have had quite the healthcare journey. I am glad you have found this community and joined this conversation. It looks like you have successfully connected with several members already who are very supportive, which is great!
You will notice that I have removed your Facebook name and replaced it with a note to have people private message you for your contact information. We do this to protect your privacy from spammers and in general. You are allowed to privately share that information as you see fit.
All that said, it sounds like you have a lot of information you plan to use in seeking answers for what is next. Will you come back and provide updates so other members can learn from your experience as well?
Oh....Thank-You so much for messaging me about the practices on this site. I have never participated in a chat room or a forum before and I’m kind of dense I guess, not realizing people could misuse my FB name or email address. Yes... I will definitely check back here...update my condition...and try to find answers to my many questions for sure!!!
This forum has been a godsend to me… I have researched corpectomy‘s a lot before, but I never thought about looking for a forum/chat room to find out some information from people that have gone through the same thing. My sister-in-law asked me last night if I had done that? I never even thought of it. I am so so glad I did it because yours was the first site I went to and it’s been a tremendous help in trying to understand what’s going on with me.....in thinking about what questions I should have answered ...and also giving me some bit of ‘peace’ in realizing that I’m not the only one out there going through this.
Again, Thank-You for letting me in on this site. I truly appreciate all of the kind and caring people that have written back to me in hopes of helping me figure this all out. I know this will help me next week when I go back for my 12 week check up, while I still have some concerns about my walking ability and my legs.
As my son continues to tell me… ‘Take it one day at a time, Mom’ ...and that’s what I’m trying to do. ☺️❤️
I’m almost at 12 weeks now....And I am starting to get a little concerned because I still haven’t gotten my normal ability to walk back… Did you ever have any problems walking ....and if you did, did they resolve themselves or are you still having any residual problems? I go to the doctor on Tuesday for an X-ray, etc.... but I’m just concerned that something must still be wrong since I can’t walk very well.....and I still have some swelling (bilaterally) in my legs and feet. Do you EVER feel like you’re back to ‘normal’???
Anyone 70+ with arthritis and osteoporosis had this done and if so how is it going?
Hello @lfortin and welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. You will notice that I have moved your post into an existing discussion on this same topic so you may connect with members such as @constancebabe @jenniferhunter and @amywood20.
As well, feel free to go back through the previous comments to see what you can learn while we wait for others to join.
Is this a procedure that you have been presented with as a recommendation for you personally or someone you care for?
Personally
@lfortin I had a cervical fusion in my 50's, but I don't have osteoporosis. Bone quality is a factor if any hardware will be screwed into the bone because screws can become dislodged or loosen. I didn't want hardware because my body reacts to metals such as pierced earrings and I had to give that up. I had a single level fusion at C5/C6 with only a bone graft (no hardware) and stayed in a hard collar until it fused which was 3 months. I knew that going in and made that choice and that time went by faster than I thought since I focused on resting and healing. You might want to ask if you can have a procedure without hardware. A surgeon takes a risk when they allow a patient to make that choice because you have to be careful and compliant and just stay home instead of riding in a car that could be involved in an accident when you are not fused yet. Other factors that affect bone healing adversely are smoking which I mention for information, but I have never been a smoker. I do take bio-identical hormone replacement which does help to preserve bone density and I healed well and spinal fusion had begun at 3 months post op. With spinal discs that collapse, it puts pressure on the facet joints when they get closer together and causes arthritic changes. A bone spacer in a fusion restores normal height and takes pressure off the facet joint which will no longer move because that level is fused.
Thank you. You are the second one who has mentioned not doing the metal hardware. I have the same problem.