Abstract
Anterior interbody fusion of the cervical spine (ACDF) with bone grafts or cages has
become the gold standard for treating cervical disk disease. Several technical modifications
have been developed, but currently no consensus exists regarding the optimal technique.
In addition, there is also evidence that complications are frequently associated with
this procedure. A frequent cause for implant failure in monosegmental ACDF is cage
migration into the vertebral end plates or the spinal canal. We report a patient admitted
for sudden quadriparesis with complete motor deficit caused by posttraumatic cervical
disk protrusion at C4–C5, resulting in spinal compression. ACDF using a titanium stand-alone
cage was performed and cured the patient. At the 1-year follow-up visit, imaging showed
asymptomatic anterior complete extrusion of the cage out of the disk space. To our
knowledge, such an anterior cage migration without trauma has not been reported in
the literature to date, and we tried to find technical reasons to explain this complication.
Keywords
posttraumatic cervical medullar compression - ACDF - arthrodesis - fusion cage - anterior
migration