Full-endoscopic operations of the cervical spine in disc herniations
Abstract
The therapy of degenerative diseases of the spine involves both medical and socioeconomic problems. A surgical procedure may be necessary if conservative measures have been exhausted and states of exacerbated pain or neurological deficits persist. Despite good therapeutic results with conventional operations, there may be consecutive damage due to traumatization. Thus, it is important to continuously improve these procedures. Taking existing quality standards into account, the objectives must be to minimize operation-induced traumatization and negative long-term sequelae. Current research results and technical innovations must be critically applied in order to guarantee the best-possible treatment strategies.Minimal-invasive techniques can reduce tissue damage and its consequences. Endoscopic operations under continuous fluid flow bring advantages which raise these procedures in many areas to the standard level. New optics have been developed with a wide working channel for spinal surgery which enable sufficient bone resection using burrs under visual control. These days, there are various full-endoscopic techniques available which can supplement each other. For the cervical spine, the anterior transdiscal and the posterior access are available. There are specific advantages and disadvantages for both techniques. The posterior access enables therapy of all lateral disc herniations. Unlike the anterior transdiscal procedure, which is the only treatment available for medial pathologies, the disc is not damaged and mobility is expanded.Considering the indication criteria, now the combination of full-endoscopic approaches with the new developed endoscopes and instruments provides sufficient decompression under visual control of cervical disc herniations. The results are equal to that of conventional procedures, but with advantages of a truly minimally-invasive procedure.However, total avoidance of known problems in spinal surgery can hardly be imagined. In addition, open procedures will remain as indispensable in the future as they currently are. At the moment the full-endoscopic procedures are estimated as a sufficient supplementation and alternative inside the complete spectrum of spine surgery.