Research progress of Chiari malformation type I and atlantoaxial instability
10.3760/cma.j.cn121113-20210407-00285
- VernacularTitle:Chiari畸形Ⅰ型与寰枢椎不稳关系的研究进展
- Author:
Kerem ERXAT·
1
;
Mardan MURADIL·
;
Abliz YAKUP·
;
Samat XIRALI·
;
Chuanhui XUN
;
Tao XU
;
Weibin SHENG
;
Mamat MARDAN·
Author Information
1. 新疆医科大学第一附属医院脊柱外科,乌鲁木齐 830054
- Keywords:
Arnold-Chiari Malformation;
Syringomyelia;
Atlanto-axial Joint;
Joint Instability;
Zygapophyseal joint
- From:
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics
2023;43(7):458-464
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Chiari malformation (CM) is a group of congenital cerebellar tonsillar hernia malformations involving the craniocervical junction. Chiari malformation type I (CMI) is the most common in clinic, however its pathogenesis is still unclear, and there is no consensus on the surgical treatment standard of CMI. At present, the most widely accepted is the theory of posterior fossa incompatibility, so doctors at home and abroad use posterior fossa decompression (PFD) and posterior fossa compression with duraplasty (PFDD) as the gold standard for surgical treatment, and have their own experience and technical improvement. However, the volume of the posterior cranial fossa in some patients is no different from that in healthy people, and about 30% of the patients with CMI have poor results after posterior cranial fossa decompression. As a result, this operation cannot treat all patients with CMI. In recent years, with the development of imaging, the progress of diagnostic technology and the deepening of understanding of CM, some studies have shown that CMI may be related to atlantoaxial instability, and proposed that CMI is the secondary factor of atlantoaxial instability, and atlantoaxial fusion is the standard of surgical treatment, which has caused great controversy in academic circles. Different clinical research results of scholars support or oppose this theory: some studies have shown that the clinical symptom relief rate of patients with CMI treated with atlantoaxial fusion is 96.9%; another study showed that 70% of patients with CMI underwent atlantoaxial fusion had improved neurological function, but the overall postoperative effect was not satisfactory. In short, CMI is related to many diseases and its clinical manifestations are complex. Therefore, individualized management and treatment should be carried out in combination with the clinical manifestations and auxiliary examination results of patients.