Dr. Joseph Bosco, M.D.
Dr. Joseph Bosco is a board certified orthopedic surgeon specializing in sports medicine, knee, shoulder and elbow surgery, including skiing injuries, elbow reconstruction, rotator cuff repair, shoulder arthroscopy, knee arthroscopy and elbow arthroscopy. His primary practice is located at The New York University Medical Center in New York City. He also maintains an office in Queens, New York.

Dr. Joseph Bosco is a board certified orthopedic surgeon specializing in sports medicine, knee, shoulder and elbow surgery, including skiing injuries, elbow reconstruction, rotator cuff repair, shoulder arthroscopy, knee arthroscopy and elbow arthroscopy. His primary practice is located at The New York University Medical Center in New York City. He also maintains an office in Queens, New York.

 

Patient Education > FAQ > Spine - Cervical

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I have severe neck pain from a collapsed disc and bone in the spine. The doctor wants to remove the bone. Won't this just make my spine collapse even more?

Removing the main body of the vertebral bone is called a corpectomy. Once this is
done, the spine is fused with a bone graft at that level. Sometimes a metal plate is also inserted. The plate gives the spine extra support until the graft fills in. This keeps the spine from further collapse.



The main problem after corpectomy is degeneration of the spine at the segment above or below. This is called the adjacent segment. Studies show adjacent degeneration occurs in up to 75 percent of all patients. Some researchers have tried to prove the
changes are just the result of a natural aging process.



The majority of studies report changes occur, but it hasn't been proven to be caused by the fusion itself. Most scientists think the corpectomy and fusion causes a shift of the
load through the spine to the nearby vertebrae.



The authors of a recent study suggest the altered loads occur because of changes within the spinal ligaments. It's possible that increased motion at the segment above and below the fused spine causes the ligaments to increase in size or hypertrophy. The ligaments put increased pressure on the spine, not the lack of motion at the fused site.

Vaijayantee Kulkarni, MCh (Neuro), et al. Accelerated Spondylotic Changes Adjacent to the Fused Segment Following Central Cervical Corpectomy: Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study Evidence. In Journal of Neurosurgery: Spine. January 2004. Vol. 100. No. 1. Pp. 2-6.


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Dr. Joseph Bosco is a board certified orthopedic surgeon specializing in sports medicine, knee, shoulder and elbow surgery, including skiing injuries, elbow reconstruction, rotator cuff repair, shoulder arthroscopy, knee arthroscopy and elbow arthroscopy. His primary practice is located at The New York University Medical Center in New York City. He also maintains an office in Queens, New York.

 

 

Dr. Joseph Bosco is a board certified orthopedic surgeon specializing in sports medicine, knee, shoulder and elbow surgery, including skiing injuries, elbow reconstruction, rotator cuff repair, shoulder arthroscopy, knee arthroscopy and elbow arthroscopy. His primary practice is located at The New York University Medical Center in New York City. He also maintains an office in Queens, New York.
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Joseph Bosco, M.D. - New York University Medical Center, New York, New York