Cervical Fusion
Advanced Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Post Operative Spine RehabCervical Fusion Treatment Guideline
General Guidelines
- Decrease swelling
- Prevent stiffness/guarding
- Reeducate movement patterns/posture education
- Improve stabilization
- Increase activity tolerance
Precautions
- Avoid extension with anterior cervical fusion
- Avoid flexion with posterior cervical fusion
- Promote AROM and avoid passive stretching
- Limit cervical ROM until 810 weeks
Phase I: Immediate post Surgical Phase (IPSP) 08 weeks
Goals:
- Decrease pain and inflammation.
- Encourage wound healing.
- Increase activity tolerance
- Initiate aerobic activity
- Monitor for signs of possible infection.
- Educate on body mechanics and posture for bed mobility
Precautions:
- Prevent excessive initial mobility or stress on tissues
- Limit overhead arm movements, bending and lifting.
- Please follow physician recommendations regarding use of collars etc. (multilevel fusions hard
collar for 6 wks; onelevel fusions wear a collar as needed for a week or two)
Treatment Summary:
- Education on bed mobility and transfers with proper spine positioning.
- Reinforce basic postop home exercise program including
- Diaphragmatic breathing
- Relaxation exercises
- Upper extremity extension isometric exercises
- Increase tolerance to walking (½ mile daily) or bike (1530 min cardiovascular activity)
- Reinforce sitting, standing and ADL modifications with neutral spine and proper body mechanics.
Criteria for progression:
- Pain and swelling within tolerance.
- Independent HEP
- Tolerance of 15 min of exercise and 1530 min of cardiovascular exercise.
- Functional ADL for self care/hygiene
Phase II: Initiation of OPPT 812 weeks/23 times per week
Goals:
- Patient education/BackNeck school
- Reestablish neuromuscular recruitment of the longus colli (Functional dynamic stability)
- Normalize scapulohumeral rhythm
- Return to activities of daily living
- Improve positional tolerances for return to work (sitting/standing 3045 min)
Precautions:
- Avoid cervical loading (overhead arm resisted movements)
- Avoid passive stretching of cervical spine
Treatment Summary:
- Back Mechanics Program
- Anatomy, Pathology, & Biomechanics
- Reinforce neutral spine positioning
- Body mechanics and training: Performance of functional activities with neutral spine and
protective positions
- Manual Therapy:
- Grade 1 or grade 2 joint mobs for neuromodulation of pain
- Scar mobilization. Educate patient in scar mobilization.
- Nerve mobilization (nerve glides). Do not reproduce symptoms.
- Exercises:
- Train upright posture.
- Diaphragmatic breathing: Proper breathing technique without the use of accessory respiratory
muscles - Initiate Cervical Isometric exercises.
- Initiate Cervical range of motion.
- Initiate Scapular movement reeducation including shoulder shrugs, shoulder rolls, scapular
mobilization exercises - Upper thoracic mobilization exercises: cat/camel exercises, upper thoracic extension, upper
thoracic rotation, arm clocks, combined thoracic/cervical motions
- Neuromuscular reeducation of longus colli with pressure biofeedback (include arm and leg
movements in varying positions)
- Restricted to 5 lbs with arm exercises (below 90 elevation)
- Abdominal Exercises (watch cervical spine), perform basic core strengthening of lumbar
spine. (front and side planks) at 1012 weeks
- Cardiovascular training, treadmill, UBE, stationary bike
- Address other mechanical restrictions as needed
- Modalities for symptom modulation if needed
Criteria for progression:
- Patient has working knowledge of body and lifting mechanics.
- Able to hold chin tuck for 10 sec (raise of 10 mm Hg pressure from 20 mm HG baseline)
- Cardiovascular tolerance to 30 min/day
- Dynamic sitting and standing tolerance of 4560 min
Phase III: Advanced PT 1218 weeks/23 times per week.
Goals:
- Progress with strengthening and flexibility exercises.
- Advanced lifting and posture training
- Initiate balance activities
- Address return to work/recreational activity concerns
- Advanced stabilization and trunk control
Treatment Summary:
- Body mechanics training
- Posture emphasis with exercises, posture training
- Work/activity specific training
- Manual Therapy:
- Soft tissue mobilization to decrease guarding
- Joint mobilizations over restricted joints (around fusion) to increase contribution to overall
movement (OA/AA and upper thoracic). Protect fusion.
- Nerve mobilization (nerve glides). Do not reproduce symptoms.
- Exercises:
- Train upright posture.
- Cervical mobility exercises (AROM is patient/physician/surgery dependent. Do not promote
- Occulomotor training and proprioceptive training (laser pointer)
- Upper extremity strengthening (Rhythmic stabilization upper extremity, free weight shoulder
strengthening)
- Scapular stabilization/strengthening exercises (shoulder shrugs/rolls, prone scapular series)
- Spinal stabilization exercises lumbar and cervical
- Continue Upper thoracic mobilization exercises
- Advanced balance training exercises.
- Neuromuscular reeducation of longus colli with pressure biofeedback (include arm and leg
movements in varying positions)
- Cardiovascular training, treadmill, UBE, stationary bike
- 1418 weeks: Initiate advanced strengthening (chest press, seated rows, pull downs, incline
push ups) and functional core strengthening (overhead chops, lifts, diagonal lifts, push ups).
- Consider FCE.
passive stretching).
Criteria for discharge:
- Manual muscle testing is within functional limits
- Independent with home program
- Cervical ROM within functional limits
Pearls of rehab:
- Focus on local muscle systems (tonic/postural/stabilizing) longus colli before global
(phasic/primary movers) such as SCM, PCM. Local muscles are shorter in length and closer toaxis or rotation while the global muscles have no direct attachment on the spine.
- Avoid preloading the spine with overhead arm movements too early in rehab.
- Cervical range of motion and isometrics to start only after 8 weeks.
- Nopain no gain axiom usually does not apply to the spine
- Focus on low load high repetitions to improve endurance rather than high load low repetition for
strength. - Focus on pain relief with Neck Disability Index of 50+, with scores of 3050 focus on decreasing pain, muscle reeducation, gradual strengthening, and flexibility and improve cardiovascular
endurance, with scores less than 30 focus on work simulation and progressive