Background
Athletes frequently develop cervical radicular symptoms as a result of a blunt injury
to the head or neck, particularly when participating in contact or collision sports
such as american football, soccer, rugby, wrestling and others. Any athletic endeavor
leading to a collision may cause abrupt cervical axial compression, flexion, or extension
producing a neurapraxia of the exiting nerve roots or brachial plexus due to traction
or direct compression. In this scenerio, athletes sometimes experience a burning pain,
which radiates distal from the posterior neck region to the fingertips. This constellation
of symptoms is often referred to as a burner syndrome or “stinger” [[Table 1]]. Burners are typically isolated transient events, but can sometimes become recurrent
and may even develop to a chronic syndrome [[1],[2]].
Table 1
Differential Diagnosis Radiculopathy versus Stinger
Radiculpathy
|
Stinger
|
Monoradicular
|
Polyradicular
|
hypersensitivity or numbness
|
immediate pain
|
sensory symptoms > motor symptoms
|
symptoms few minutes
|
difficult to localize
|
global transient weakness
|
tingling, dull, aching
|
weakness, tingling, burning
|
Multiple underlying morphological factors exist which have been associated with the
incidence of cervical spinal injuries in athletics including congenital or developmental
spinal stenoses, congenital fusions, or intervertebral disk herniations or degeneration
[[3],[4]].
Other developmental anomalies that may predispose to subsequent neural compressive
injury include spina bifida, Langerhans cell histocytosis (eosinophilic granuloma),
exostoses, fibrous dysplasia, and melorheostosis. Additionally, posttraumatic lesions
causing osseous enlargement could similarly predispose to later injury.
However, to our knowledge, there have been no reports of a burner syndrome developing
through a contact sport injury related to an underlying expansile cervical spine lesion.
We present a case of a rugby player with a unique clinical history of recurrent burners
thought to be secondary to an osteoblastoma involving the posterior arch of the atlas.
Initially, the condition was felt to most likely reflect previous trauma and a reparative
osseous proliferation. After complete imaging evaluation, the lesion was felt to more
likely reflect a developmental lesion with bony expansion narrowing the central canal.
In this report, we will detail the presentation, treatment, postsurgical outcome,
and return to play recommendations for this patient.
Case presentation
A 35-year-old active rugby player with a one-year history of multiple recurrent stingers
or burners in his left upper extremity presented to the senior author for evaluation
three weeks following his most recent episode. In that episode, while playing rugby,
the patient was involved in a head on collision with another player. The subject was
referred to our orthopaedic surgery spine clinic due to a positive L’Hermitte’s sign.
The patient reported a brief loss of consciousness and states he awoke with a “stiff
neck”. He also stated that he experienced a burning and tingling pain shooting down
his left upper extremity into all five fingers. The pain worsened with activity and
was non-dermatomal. His symptoms improved over the subsequent hour after the trauma,
and had completely resolved after 48 hours later. He denied any loss of hand or fine
finger dexterity or bowel or bladder dysfunction. He also denied any history of fever,
chills, weight loss, night pain, nausea or vomiting. He did however admit to intermittent
episodes of cervical neck pain, with exacerbation during neck movement, in the interval
between the trauma and the office visit, which responded well to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
medications (NSAIDs).
On physical examination, cervical range of motion was limited to 10 degrees of extension
and 45 degrees of rotation with no restriction in active flexion or extension. There
were no motor or sensory deficits. Reflexes were equal bilaterally, with no upper
motor neuron signs noted. Provocative tests such as flexion, extension and Spurling’s
sign that were performed were negative or unrevealing.
Plain radiographic evaluation (AP, lateral, flexion, extension cervical radiographs)
revealed a mild decrease in cervical lordosis on the neutral lateral view and a hypertrophied,
blastic appearance to the posterior arch of the atlas.
A Torg ratio [[5]] (ratio of canal diameter divided by vertebral body diameter on a lateral plain
cervical radiograph) of 1 was measured at the C5 vertebral level. A cervical spine
magnetic resonance examination (MRI) showed decreased signal intensity within the
spinal cord on T1-weighted images and increased signal intensity on T2-weighted images
at the level of C1 indicative of spinal cord edema and or myelomalacia. A computerized
tomography examination (CT scan) demonstrated an expansile lesion involving the posterior
arch of C1, with an intact overlying cortex and no soft tissue extension ([Figures 1], [2]).
Figure 1
Fig 1 Axial (arrowheads) and Fig 2 sagittal CT demonstrate an expansile lesion (arrow)
of the posterior arch of C1. It is contained within the cortex with no soft tissue
extension. The bony margins appear smooth, homogeneous and sclerotic.
Figure 2
Fig 1 Axial (arrowheads) and Fig 2 sagittal CT demonstrate an expansile lesion (arrow)
of the posterior arch of C1. It is contained within the cortex with no soft tissue
extension. The bony margins appear smooth, homogeneous and sclerotic.
The bony margins appeared smooth, homogeneous and sclerotic, and there was a central
lucency suggestive of a nidus. The expansile lesion was noted to result in significant
compression on the posterior thecal sac and spinal cord at this level ([Figure 3]).
Figure 3
Sagittal T2 weighted MRI demonstrates an expansile lesion (arrows) of the posterior
arch of C1 resulting in significant compression on the posterior thecal sac and spinal
cord.
Radiographically, the lesion had features typical for a benign tumor such as a large
osteoid osteoma or osteoblastoma, including osseous expansion, peripheral sclerosis
and bony hypertrophy, internal lucency, and even suggestion of a central nidus. The
lesion was greater than 1.5 cm in diameter.
The patient subsequently underwent an en bloc resection of the posterior atlas via
a posterior approach. The lamina was resected out to the margins of the C1 isthmus
and vertebral arteries bilaterally. Intraoperative neuromonitoring did not reveal
any abnormality prior to or following tumor resection. Due to the presence of myelomalacia
and the potential for excessive neural shear stress from cervical flexion or rotation,
a fusion procedure was considered, but the lack of anticipated spinal instability
after surgical removal of the C1 lamina lead the patient to elect against the fusion.
The surgical specimen was sent to pathology where it was noted to be consistent with
simple benign osseous hypertrophy; neither consistent with an osteoid osteoma or osteoblastoma
on histological analysis ([Figure 4]).
Figure 4
Histologically, the bony trabeculae are thickened and woven bone formation is identified
at the cortical surface of the lesion. Lamellar bone formation is centrally identified.
There is no evidence of nidus formation. The medullary component shows trilineage
hematopoiesis and there is no definitive evidence of a neoplasm. The lesions are interpreted
as reactive bone formation.
The patient had an uneventful postoperative course and at the latest follow-up, just
over one year out of surgery, the patient was doing well without any complaints of
neck discomfort or neurologic symptoms. Even so, given the lack of an intact posterior
arch of C1, he was advised to refrain from contact sports due to the presence of cervical
spinal cord myelomalacia.
Discussion & conclusion
Imaging work up of developmental lesions involving the axial skeleton most frequently
includes plain radiographs, followed by CT for assessment of bony matrix and MRI for
evaluation of intrinsic spinal cord parenchymal changes and the potential neural compression.
With some lesions, bony scintigraphy or PET scanning may be helpful to assess for
metabolic activity.
This rugby player’s clinical and radiographic findings suggested that the bony lesion
involving the posterior elements of the cervical atlas was most compatible with an
osteoblastoma, which could directly or indirectly predispose the patient to upper
extremity stingers or burner. Although the surgical pathology specimen was determined
to be a benign, productive osseous lesion, resection for alleviation of the mass effect
on the spinal cord ultimately eliminated the patient’s symptoms of the burner syndrome.
Many authors have studied athletes to determine if there are any variables or pre-existing
conditions that make one susceptible to “stingers”. After evaluating 165 freshman
football players, Castro et al. applied the Torg ratio to their cervical imaging studies
and found a relationship between the prevalance of burners in those athletes with
cervical spinal stenosis. They demonstrated that college athletes with a ratio of
less than 0.75 were at an increased risk for recurrent stingers, however the ratio
was not related to the initial onset of a stinger [[6]].
In another study, Leivitz et al. reported that there is a high incidence of cervical
canal stenosis in football players with recurrent burner syndrome [[1]].
One of the more difficult answers to determine with these injuries is an appropriate
time interval beyond which an athlete can safely return to play following a traumatic
cervical peripheral neuropraxia. This is a decision derived from a compilation of
factors including the patient’s history, severity and chronicity of symptoms, mechanism
of injury, objective anatomical injury (based on physical examination or imaging abnormalities),
and the athlete’s recovery response [[7]].
Recommendations for return to play in the setting of sports related “stinger or burner”
are generally based on the absence of specific structural abnormalities if imaging
studies are available, and the clinical findings and include the following: complete
resolution of symptoms, normalization of upper extremity strength to baseline, and
normal cervical range of motion [[8]]. If symptoms persist, a more detailed evaluation including advanced imaging studies
(MRI or CT) if not already obtained, should be performed to rule out an occult fracture,
physical cord compression (herniated disk), cord parenchymal changes, instability,
or structural abnormalities, before returning to play. Advanced cervical disk degeneration
has been noted in athletes with chronic recurrent burner syndrome [[3]].
Patients with either an osteoblastoma or osteoid osteoma often present with a complaint
of intermittent or constant axial spine pain, worst at night, and responsive to aspirin
or NSAIDs. In addition to axial pain, neural compression by the tumor may cause clinical
manifestations of myelopathy, radiculopathy or a combination of these [[9]]. As a result, these tumors should generally be considered, although not likely,
in the differential diagnosis of young patients with complaints of persistent or recurrent
axial pain and radicular symptoms.
While an osteoid osteoma or osteoblastoma involving the spine can often be diagnosed
with radiographs, advanced imaging including MRI and/or CT is generally indicated
to define the nature and extent of soft tissue involvement or compromise. For example,
Raskas et al. reported a 57% incidence of epidural invasion in patients with a documented
osteoblastoma [[10]].
In summary, the burner syndrome is most often a benign condition commonly experienced
by athletes participating in collision sports. Symptoms are typically self-limited,
resolving within hours to days. In cases where symptoms fail to resolve, or the patient
experiences several recurrent episodes, further clinical and imaging investigation
should be performed to exclude possible lesions of the cervical spine.
Return to play is predicated on the absence of intrinsic cord abnormalities, instability
or symptoms of neck pain, lack of cervical range of motion, or neurologic symptoms
[[7],[8]].
We conclude that complete en bloc resection of the benign lesion in our case, which
turned out to be hypertrophic bone, revealed very good clinical results.