What is ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament of the cervical spine

  Osteosclerosis of the posterior longitudinal ligament is literally a disease in which tough ligament tissue becomes hard bone tissue, i.e., ossification. It is the most common disease in Asia, especially in Japan, and is most often found in the cervical spine, which is one of the pathogenic bases for cervical spondylosis. Its etiology and pathogenesis are not yet well understood.
  Due to the appearance of ossified tissue in the posterior longitudinal ligament, the spinal cord is directly compressed from anterior to posterior, resulting in anterior compression and deformation of the spinal cord, which leads to motor and sensory nerve damage and necrosis. However, the progression of the disease is generally slow, and the spinal cord will tolerate and adapt to the slow progression of compression, so the patient may be asymptomatic or have very mild symptoms for a long period of time. Therefore, patients may not show any clinical symptoms in the early stages. When the ossified mass thickens and widens to a certain degree causing cervical spinal stenosis, or in case of trauma, the pressure on the nerve tissue exceeds the threshold of tolerance, the nerve function will turn down sharply and spinal cord necrosis or spinal cord softening lesions may occur.
  If your cervical spondylosis is caused by ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament, Prof. Shen recommends that you seek early medical attention, and if surgery is needed, it should be performed as early as possible, with cervical brace protection before surgery to avoid trauma.
  As a spine surgeon, I often encounter patients with cervical spine trauma in my clinical work – they have been working normally with almost no symptoms before, but just one minor trauma has changed their fate completely. For example, after a heavy snowfall in the winter of 2010, an elderly man in his 60s slipped and fell while trying to board a crowded bus and immediately felt numbness in his limbs and below his chest, and was unable to move his arms and legs. Another example is that last summer, a bus company employee fell after a drunken fall and woke up with quadriplegia, later partially recovering the movement of both lower extremities, but the upper extremities were never heard from again. How could a minor trauma lead to such serious consequences? The examination revealed that these cervical spine trauma patients all had a common pathogenic basis – ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament of the cervical spine.
  I. What is ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament of the cervical spine?
   The posterior longitudinal ligament is located in the posterior part of the vertebral body in the spinal canal, extending from the cardinal spine down to the sacral spine. Posterior longitudinal ligament ossification is the formation of ectopic bone structures in the posterior longitudinal ligament under the action of many factors. OPLL mostly occurs in the cervical spine, less in the thoracic spine, and rarely in the lumbar spine.
  What is the etiology of cervical OPLL?
  The etiology and pathogenesis of cervical OPLL are still not well understood. However, studies have found that it is related to the following factors.
  1, genetic factors nucleotide pyrophosphatase (NAPPS) gene single nucleotide polymorphism.
  Mssamichi et al. suggested that mutations in the human NPPS genotype may contribute to the development of OPLL. alterations in TGF-β1, TGF3, and COL6A1 gene polymorphisms are also high-risk factors for the development of OPLL.
  2. Dietary habits and abnormal glucose metabolism
  Kazushi et al. conducted a controlled study of the dietary habits of 69 patients with OPLL and 138 normal people in Hokkaido, Japan, between 1998 and 2001, and the results of a questionnaire survey showed that people who preferred pickled foods such as kimchi and rice as their staple food had a significantly higher risk of developing OPLL. The risk of OPLL was significantly higher than those who favored the consumption of chicken and soy products.
  In addition, the proportion of patients with a history of diabetes was significantly higher in the OPLL population than in the normal control group, and diabetes may be an important risk factor for the development of OPLL.
  3, bone formation and bone resorption disorders
  It has been found that the occurrence of OPLL is due to systemic or local factors affecting the synthesis and distribution of hormones and growth factors related to bone metabolism, thus disrupting the balance of osteochondral formation and resorption and resulting in ectopic ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament.
  4, race, region, gender factors
  The incidence rate of Caucasians is significantly lower than that of Caucasians. In terms of geographical distribution, OPLL is more common in the Asian continent, with a low incidence in Africa, Europe and the United States, and an incidence rate of 0.01%-1.7% in Europe and America, accounting for 26% of patients with spinal cervical spondylosis. It is more common in Asia and Japan, with an incidence of 1.9%-4.3%, and is an important cause of spinal cord cervical spondylosis. The incidence is also higher in the eastern coast of China.
  5.Intervertebral disc degeneration
  Due to the instability of the intervertebral body after the degeneration of the intervertebral disc, pulling the fiber ring or surrounding ligament attached to the vertebral body, causing subperiosteal hemorrhage, hematoma infiltration into the posterior longitudinal ligament under calcification or ossification is formed OPLL.
  6.Mechanical stimulation
  The anterior flexion, posterior extension and lateral flexion activities of the cervical spine and the protrusion of the nucleus pulposus directly lead to abnormal stress distribution of the cervical intervertebral disc and increased tension of the posterior longitudinal ligament, and this mechanical stimulation of the posterior longitudinal ligament directly promotes the acceleration of the ossification process of the posterior longitudinal ligament.
  Third, why does ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament lead to spinal cord injury?
  With the appearance of ossified tissue in the posterior longitudinal ligament, the spinal cord is directly compressed from front to back, resulting in anterior compression and deformation of the spinal cord, which in turn causes motor and sensory nerve injury and necrosis, and in this progressive chronic course, if the compression injury is aggravated, spinal cord necrosis may be aggravated or spinal cord softening lesions may occur.
  Since the spinal cord develops a certain tolerance and adaptation to slowly progressive compression, the patient may be asymptomatic or have very mild symptoms for a considerable period of time. However, after the compression of the nerve tissue exceeds the critical value of its tolerance, the nerve function will turn down sharply.
  IV. What kind of spinal cord damage will be caused by cervical OPLL?
  1.Tetraplegia
  During spinal cord shock, it is characterized by bradykinetic paralysis below the plane of injury, with loss of movement, reflexes and sphincter function, which gradually evolves into spastic paralysis after 2-4 weeks, characterized by increased muscle tone, hyperactive tendon reflexes, and pathological vertebral fasciculus sign.
  2.Spinal cord hemisection syndrome
  Also known as Brown-Sequard syndrome. The motor and deep sensation of the trunk and limbs ipsilateral to the plane of injury are lost, and the pain and temperature sensation of the contralateral limb are lost.
  3.Anterior spinal cord syndrome
  Severe pressure on the front of the cervical spinal cord can sometimes cause occlusion of the anterior central spinal artery, resulting in quadriplegia, with lower limb paralysis heavier than upper limb paralysis, but the lower limbs and perineum still maintain position and deep sensation, and sometimes even retain superficial sensation.
  4.Central spinal canal syndrome
  Most of them occur in cervical hyperextension injury. The cervical spinal canal undergoes drastic volume changes due to cervical hyperextension, and the spinal cord is subjected to anterior and posterior compression by the folded ligamentum flavum, intervertebral discs or bone spurs, causing damage to the conduction bundles around the central canal of the spinal cord, which manifests as quadriplegia below the plane of injury, with the upper extremity heavier than the lower extremity, without sensory separation, and with poor prognosis.
  V. Does cervical OPLL cause serious complications?
  Cervical OPLL can cause serious complications and even life-threatening complications if it causes severe spinal cord injury.
  Common complications include.
  1, respiratory failure and respiratory tract infections
  2.Infection and stones in the genitourinary tract
  3, bedsores
  4, body temperature disorders
  VI. Treatment
  Treatment includes non-surgical treatment and surgical treatment.
  1.Non-surgical treatment: bed rest, cervical brace fixation, anti-inflammatory and analgesic, nerve nutrition.
  Indications: only neck and shoulder pain, or with slight nerve root or spinal cord damage; posterior longitudinal ligament spinal canal occupancy less than 30%, myelogram without obvious obstruction; other reasons can not tolerate surgery.
  It is important to note that ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament is a progressive pathological process. It should be reviewed regularly during the conservative treatment, and once the compression on the spinal cord is found to be significantly aggravated, active surgery should be performed.
  2.Surgical treatment
  Surgery is divided into anterior cervical surgery and posterior cervical surgery.
  Indications: severe symptoms, obvious ossification, sagittal diameter of the spinal canal is less than 12mm, and the spinal cord is obviously compressed on imaging. Conservative treatment is ineffective, and the symptoms are aggravated; the ossification foci are obvious, and minor trauma can cause spinal cord injury.
  3. Indications for anterior cervical and posterior cervical surgery.
  Indications for anterior cervical surgery: segmental ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament below cervical 2-3, thickness of ossification foci less than 5 mm, spinal canal stenosis rate less than 45%.
  Indications for posterior cervical surgery: continuous or mixed type of posterior longitudinal ligament ossification in more than 3 segments; ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament involving cervical 1-2 or cervicothoracic junction area; ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament with acute cervical spinal cord injury.