Surgical treatment of non-responsive cervicogenic headache
J. Jansen
Neurosurgical Department, Georg August University, Robert-Koch-Str. 40, 37075 Göttingen, Germany.
ABSTRACT
Objective
102 patients suffering from long-lasting, very severe
cervicogenic headache (CEH), non-responsive to physical or
drug therapy, were surgically treated.
Methods
Different diagnostic procedures and their significance for
determining the advisability of surgery are summarised. The
particular importance of the patient history and local
anaesthesia together with the clinical examination is outlined.
Different surgical approaches are described: ganglionectomy,
ventral and dorsal decompressive operation.
Results
CEH can be triggered by vascular or scar tissue compression of
the C2 root and ganglion and irritation of other upper cervical
nerve roots (C3, C4). Vascular compression is caused
by: (a) the sinusoidal venous plexus, which surrounds the
ganglion and nerve root like a cuff and may be dilated upon
raised venous pressure; (b) further on by arterial loops
throbbing against the ganglion; and (c) (rarely) by
arteriovenous (AV) malformations. Nerve fibre degeneration is
demonstrated morphologically by electron optical investigation.
Afferences from ganglion C2 to the brain stem, as documented by
experimental investigation on cats using the injection of HRP
into the C2-ganglion, can explain the reference of pain from the
neck to the fronto-ocular region and could at the same time
elucidate the genesis of accompanying symptoms.
Degenerative diseases such as disc protrusion and
retrospondylosis have been shown to be other trigger mechanisms
evoking CEH, as is well known from facet joint arthrosis.
Degenerative diseases usually cause dura compression with
narrowing of the spinal canal and frequently, in addition,
instability. Evocation of CEH could be explained by the
irritation, by those degenerative diseases, of structures with
pain-conducting nerve fibres (facet joint capsule, nerve root,
longitudinal ligaments, spinal dura, disc).
About 80% of our surgically treated patients were relieved of
pain or improved during a long period of follow up. The
recurrence of degenerative alterations with new irritation from
pain-conducting structures is thought to be responsible for the
recurrence of headache. Further surgical approaches for the
treatment of patients with the recurrence of pain are discussed.
Conclusion
Various surgical treatments are suggested to treat
long-lasting severe CEH in patients not responsive to any
physical or drug therapy.
Key words
Headache, cervical spine, degenerative diseases, cervical
nerve roots, root compression, pathomorphology, brain stem
afferences.
Please address correspondence and reprint requests to: Prof. Dr. med. Jürgen Jansen, Neurosurgical Department, Georg August University, Robert-Koch-Str. 40, 37075 Göttingen, Germany.
Clin Exp Rheumatol 2000: 18 (Suppl. 19): S67-S70.
© Copyright Clinical and Experimental
Rheumatology 2000.