Dana Thompson Link, MD, MS, Thomas V. McCaffrey, MD, PhD,
William E. Krauss, MD,
Michael J. Link, MD, M. Troy Ferguson, MD
Cervicomedullary compression (CMC) from traumatic, infectious, or congenital
processes of the atlanto-axial joint is a known cause of vocal cord immobility.
Cervicomedullary compression can also occur from destructive arthritic
changes and inflammatory pannus formation at the occipito- atlanto- axial
joint in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
We present findings suggesting that CMC in patients with RA is an unrecognized
cause of vocal cord immobility. Previously, vocal cord immobility in patients
with RA has been assumed to be cricoarytenoid arthritis with joint fixation.
We report 3 patients with RA and radiographically demonstrated CMC with
vocal cord immobility. One patient had bilateral vocal cord immobility
and airway obstruction; 2 patients had unilateral cord paralysis and contralateral
paresis without airway compromise. All patients had myelopathy and neck
pain in addition to brain stem symptoms. All patients underwent trans oral-transpharyngeal
decompression of the anterior craniocervical junction with subsequent posterior
fusion. These patients demonstrated full return of vocal cord function
within 3 months of decompression. We propose that CMC is a cause of vocal
cord paralysis in patients with RA that may go unrecognized without appropriate
imaging studies of the skull base and physician awareness of symptoms of
occipito-atlanto-axial subluxation and/or basilar invagination with brain
stem compression. Our results demonstrate that CMC in RA is a potentially
reversible cause of vocal cord paralysis. |