Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Active, not recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
50

Summary

Conditions
Cervical Myelopathy
Type
Observational
Design
Observational Model: CohortTime Perspective: Prospective

Participation Requirements

Age
Younger than 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Cervical myelopathy is a common condition due to degeneration of the cervical spine causing stenosis and cord compression, with a higher prevalence in Asian population. It leads to decreased hand dexterity and function, sensory loss, gait and sphincter disturbance. Natural history shows a stepwise d...

Cervical myelopathy is a common condition due to degeneration of the cervical spine causing stenosis and cord compression, with a higher prevalence in Asian population. It leads to decreased hand dexterity and function, sensory loss, gait and sphincter disturbance. Natural history shows a stepwise deterioration in most cases, whilst a slow progressive deterioration or sudden deterioration is observed in small number of subjects. The myelopathy hand was first described by Ono et al. on the analysis of finger motion impairment caused by cervical myelopathy. They described a 10 second grip and release test, which documents the number of times a subject can make a fist and release it as rapidly as possible within 10 seconds. The clumsiness associated with intrinsic finger weakness decreases the number of cycles a patient can perform during the test. They quantified patients' neurologic deficit and found that <20 grip -release cycles in 10 seconds represented symptomatic myelopathy. The presence of this sign is not only pathognomonic of cervical myelopathy but also correlates with disease severity. This is a sensitive and specific sign of pyramidal tract involvement and has since become a classical sign and objective test of the condition. The presence of myelopathic hand signs aids the diagnosis of symptomatic cervical myelopathy and its grading acts a guide to the severity of the condition to the treating surgeon. However, this quantitative analysis only provides a crude representation of the clumsiness that patients experience from their deterioration of hand function. In the original description, Ono et al. noted the quality of this movement was affected particularly in advanced cases, where there was difficult, slow and incomplete finger extension, exaggerated wrist flexion with attempted finger extension and exaggerated wrist extension with finger flexion. This was considered to be caused by a failure of synergy between the wrist and the fingers. Finger motion is complex, varies greatly and clinical evaluation is often difficult. Apart from the counting the number of cycles a patient can perform, the classical grip and release test contains other critical clinical information that has been widely described by surgeons but in very vague terms that are neither reproducible nor meaningful in clinical practice. Although this uncoordinated finger motion and inability to move their fingers smoothly in grip and release cycles are well-known phenomena in myelopathy patients, they have been only vaguely recognized. Presently these kinematic characteristics have not been quantified or studied, and it is not known which types of myelopathy present with them, how it correlates with disease severity and its prognosticating value.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03304236
Collaborators
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Dr Kenny Kwan, BMBCh(Oxon) The University of Hong Kong