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Metastatic disease of the cervical spine. A review
- Source :
- Clinical orthopaedics and related research. (359)
- Publication Year :
- 1999
-
Abstract
- The treatment of cervical metastatic disease requires a multidisciplinary team approach to evaluation and management and demands consideration of multiple factors before a regimen is accepted. The patient's overall functioning and medical status, life expectancy, history of treatment, tumor type, and location within the cervical spine and individual vertebrae all must be evaluated carefully. The majority of lesions will be amenable to nonoperative aggressive modalities aimed at shrinking tumor size and halting growth. Surgical intervention is limited to specific indications, including spinal instability, progressive neurologic deterioration from bony collapse and compression, intractable pain, and failure of conservative means of treatment.
- Subjects :
- Patient Care Team
medicine.medical_specialty
Modalities
Spinal Neoplasms
business.industry
Spinal instability
General Medicine
Disease
Cervical spine
Surgery
Regimen
Spinal Fusion
medicine
Life expectancy
Cervical Vertebrae
Humans
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Intractable pain
medicine.symptom
business
Spinal Cord Compression
Collapse (medical)
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 0009921X
- Issue :
- 359
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Clinical orthopaedics and related research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....61d67fa88d27a157d046bf00c963a779