For patients with ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament (OPLL) who have neurological-symptoms, surgery is necessary
but not always effective. Various clinical factors influence the surgical outcome. The studies identifying these factors have
been inconclusive and conflicting. It is essential for surgeons to understand the significance of the factors and choose the
optimal therapeutic strategy for OPLL. The objective of this review is to determine the clinical factors predictive of the
surgical outcome of cervical OPLL. The authors conducted a review of literature published in the English language. They examined
studies in which the correlation between clinical factors and outcome were statistically evaluated. The results showed that
the traverse area of the spinal cord, the spinal cord-evoked potentials (SCEPs), the increase of the range of motion in the
cervical spine (ROM), diabetes, history of trauma, the onset of ossification of the ligament flavum (OLF) in the thoracic
spine, snake-eye appearance (SEA) and incomplete decompression may be predictive factors. Age at surgery seems to be closely
related to the outcome of posterior surgical procedure. Whether the neurological score, OPLL type, pre-operative duration
of symptoms, focal intra-medullar high signal intensity in T2-weighted (IMHSI) and progression of OPLL or kyphosis and expansion
of the spinal canal predict the surgical outcome remains unclear. The use of uniform neurological score and proper statistic
analysis should facilitate comparison of data from different studies. It is important to analyze the effect of each factor
on groups with different surgical procedures as well as patients with different compressive pathology. Research on the etiology
and pathology of cervical myelopathy due to OPLL should be helpful in precisely understanding these clinical factors and predicting
surgical outcome.
Keywords Ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament - Cervical spine - Prognostic factors - Surgical outcome