Persistent cough associated with osteophyte formation and vagus nerve impingement following cervical spinal surgery Case report
Date
2013Author
Aydoseli, Aydin
Ulusan, Murat
Acar, Senol
Orhan, Kadir Serkan
Guldiken, Yahya
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Persistent cough due to irritation of the vagus nerve by osteophytes resulting from cervical spinal surgery is a very rare condition. The authors report the case of a 49-year-old woman who presented with a persistent cough subsequent to cervical spinal surgery. One year after the initial operation, the patient underwent surgery to free the larynx from the prevertebral fascia and cut the pharyngeal plexus, but her symptoms persisted. In order to control the cough, she used a soft cervical collar with padding inserted in the left side so that the larynx would be pushed to the right, a solution she discovered on her own. Without the collar, she coughed uncontrollably.
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