Head-neck Coordination Analysis After Minimally Invasive Surgery in the Dorsal Cervical Spine
- Conditions
- Single Brachial RadiculopathyMultilevel Cervical Spinal Stenosis
- Interventions
- Procedure: Bilateral approach for LaminoplastyProcedure: Subperiosteal approach for foraminotomyProcedure: Unilateral approach for laminoplastyProcedure: Transmuscular approach for foraminotomy
- Registration Number
- NCT01988259
- Lead Sponsor
- Schoen Klinik Hamburg Eilbek
- Brief Summary
To proof patients' benefit of minimally invasive surgery in the dorsal cervical spine an apparatus to examine head-neck-coordination was constructed.
Two different surgical techniques will be compared:
Laminoplasty: open approach vs minimally invasive surgery (MIS)-approach; Foraminotomy: open approach vs MIS-approach. Each patient will be tested before surgery, postoperative as well as 3 and 12 month follow-up.
Hypothesis is that patients after MIS-approaches perform better in their head-neck-coordination as patients with open approaches.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 100
- radicular or myelopathic compression syndrome in the cervical spine
- neurological diseases with influence on the neuromuscular function
- previous surgery on the cervical spine
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Bilateral approach for laminoplasty Bilateral approach for Laminoplasty Open approach for laminoplasty Subperiosteal approach for foraminotomy Subperiosteal approach for foraminotomy Open approach for foraminotomy Unilateral approach for laminoplasty Unilateral approach for laminoplasty Minimally invasive approach for laminoplasty Transmuscular approach for foraminotomy Transmuscular approach for foraminotomy Minimally invasive approach for foraminotomy
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Performance of head-neck-coordination after surgery of the dorsal cervical spine one year The primary outcomes of this study are the motor control performance measures assessed using force and position controlled tasks. In addition to motor control performance, secondary outcome measures of patient-oriented outcome measures (e.g. pain, disability, etc.) will be collected.
Performance measures will consist of the following tasks:
* Head-Neck Position Tracking - Rotation and Flexion/Extension
* Head-Neck Force Tracking - Flexion, Extension and Lateral Bending Left/Right
During the tracking task, a time-varying target (input signal) will be displayed. The participant will be asked to track the specified target by controlling his/her head-neck angle (position tracking) or moment (force tracking). The head position or force during these trials will represent the output signal for the motor control system. These signals will be collected and analyzed in the time and frequency domain to assess error in head-neck motor control.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Schoen Klinik Hamburg Eilbek
🇩🇪Hamburg, Germany