Department of Neurosurgery, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, USA.
Eur Spine J. 2019 Oct;28(10):2257-2265. doi: 10.1007/s00586-019-06084-0. Epub 2019 Jul 30.
Klippel-Feil syndrome (KFS) occurs due to failure of vertebral segmentation during development. Minimal research has been done to understand the prevalence of associated symptoms. Here, we report one of the largest collections of KFS patient data.
Data were obtained from the CoRDS registry. Participants with cervical fusions were categorized into Type I, II, or III based on the Samartzis criteria. Symptoms and comorbidities were assessed against type and location of fusion.
Seventy-five patients (60F/14M/1 unknown) were identified and classified as: Type I, n = 21(28%); Type II, n = 15(20%); Type III, n = 39(52%). Cervical fusion by level were: OC-C1, n = 17(22.7%), C1-C2, n = 24(32%); C2-C3, n = 42(56%); C3-C4, n = 30(40%); C4-C5, n = 42(56%); C5-C6, n = 32(42.7%); C6-C7, n = 25(33.3%); C7-T1, n = 13(17.3%). 94.6% of patients reported current symptoms and the average age when symptoms began and worsened were 17.5 (± 13.4) and 27.6 (± 15.3), respectively. Patients reported to have a high number of comorbidities including spinal, neurological and others, a high frequency of general symptoms (e.g., fatigue, dizziness) and chronic symptoms (limited range of neck motion [LROM], neck/spine muscles soreness). Sprengel deformity was reported in 26.7%. Most patients reported having received medication and invasive/non-invasive procedures. Multilevel fusions (Samartzis II/III) were significantly associated with dizziness (p = 0.040), the presence of LROM (p = 0.022), and Sprengel deformity (p = 0.036).
KFS is associated with a number of musculoskeletal and neurological symptoms. Fusions are more prevalent toward the center of the cervical region, and less common at the occipital/thoracic junction. Associated comorbidities including Sprengel deformity may be more common in KFS patients with multilevel cervical fusions. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
Klippel-Feil 综合征(KFS)是由于发育过程中椎体分节失败引起的。目前对于了解相关症状的患病率,研究甚少。在此,我们报告了最大的 KFS 患者数据集合之一。
数据来自 CoRDS 登记处。根据 Samartzis 标准,将颈椎融合的参与者分为 I 型、II 型或 III 型。根据融合的类型和位置评估症状和合并症。
共确定并分类了 75 名患者(60 名女性/14 名男性/1 名未知):I 型,n=21(28%);II 型,n=15(20%);III 型,n=39(52%)。颈椎融合水平为:OC-C1,n=17(22.7%),C1-C2,n=24(32%);C2-C3,n=42(56%);C3-C4,n=30(40%);C4-C5,n=42(56%);C5-C6,n=32(42.7%);C6-C7,n=25(33.3%);C7-T1,n=13(17.3%)。94.6%的患者报告了当前症状,症状开始和恶化的平均年龄分别为 17.5(±13.4)和 27.6(±15.3)。患者报告存在许多合并症,包括脊柱、神经和其他合并症,经常出现一般症状(例如疲劳、头晕)和慢性症状(颈部运动范围受限[LROM]、颈部/脊柱肌肉酸痛)。报告了 26.7%的 Sprengel 畸形。大多数患者报告接受了药物治疗和侵入性/非侵入性治疗。多节段融合(Samartzis II/III)与头晕(p=0.040)、存在 LROM(p=0.022)和 Sprengel 畸形(p=0.036)显著相关。
KFS 与许多肌肉骨骼和神经系统症状相关。融合更常见于颈椎中心区域,而在枕骨/胸椎交界处较少见。包括 Sprengel 畸形在内的相关合并症可能在 KFS 患者的多节段颈椎融合中更为常见。这些幻灯片可在电子补充材料中检索到。