Osteochondrosis of the cervical spine

Osteochondrosis is a degenerative bone disease that most commonly affects the spine and knees. This mainly causes excruciating pain and movement problems. Therefore, it is necessary to carry out complex processing.

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Osteochondrosis - what is it?

It is based on a violation of endochondral ossification. However, this condition is the result of local ischemia of the hyaline cartilage in the metaphyses of the growing bone. This condition is often referred to as juvenile osteochondrosis precisely because it develops in the developing skeletal system.

In patients with osteochondrosis, the cartilage tissue is ischemic, depleted and consequently dies. The cartilage does not mineralize but ossifies and then detaches from the bone on which it was formed because it is not very resistant. The separation of cartilage from bone can be due to mechanical factors.

Osteochondrosis can present in a variety of forms, but patients often present with:

  • Osteochondrosis of the spine, which in most cases includes the lumbar or cervical spine.
  • Osteochondrosis of the knee with weighting of the tuberosity of the tibia, which forms the knee joint.

In this article, we will pay special attention to osteochondrosis of the cervical spine (OHSS).

Osteochondrosis - causes

Osteochondrosis is a disease whose degenerative-dystrophic causes largely depend on the form of the disease occurring in a particular patient. With osteochondrosis of the cervical spine, its development may be the result of a violation of the tension of the structures responsible for stabilizing the spine. The cause of the disease can also be a gradual loss of the damping properties of the intervertebral discs. As for osteochondrosis of the knee, it usually occurs following an avulsion fracture of the tibial tuberosity. It is an overload resulting from an imbalance between the cross section of the muscle, the area of its attachment and the forces acting on an area that is too small, that is, the tuberosity of the tibia.

Features of osteochondrosis of the cervical segment

Osteochondrosis of the cervical segment of the spine differs in its manifestations from osteochondrosis of the lumbar and thoracic segments.

The neck area contains many blood vessels and nerves, including the vertebral artery, which enters the spinal canal. Therefore, with osteochondrosis of the cervical segment of the spine, when the vertebrae are displaced, nerve formations appear on the lateral sections (which can irritate the muscles and areas around the ligaments).

When the vertebral artery is compressed due to a narrowing of the artery (stenosis), the blood supply to the brainstem and cerebellum decreases.

Symptoms of cervical osteochondrosis

Symptoms of osteochondrosis of the cervical spine are caused by the following factors: compression of the spinal roots (cervical radiculitis), compression of the spinal cord (myelopathy), damage to the spinal cord due to circulatory disorders associated with stenosis (narrowing) of arteries and veins.

Radicular syndromes (cervical sciatica)

Symptoms of osteochondrosis of the cervical spine are associated with compression (compression) of the nerve roots. Pain can start from the neck to the shoulder and spread to the outer surface of the shoulder, forearm, and fingers. It can affect the sensitivity of the skin of the forearm, hand, and fingers.

Spinal artery syndrome

Headache (paroxysmal, persistent, impulsive, which intensifies when turning the head), dizziness, blurred vision, ringing in the ears.

SHO treatment

In the acute stage, accompanied by severe pain, local administration of analgesics and corticosteroids is indicated to relieve muscle tension in the motor segment of the vertebrae and reduce pain.

Combinations of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antispasmodics, pain relievers and vitamins are effective.