Endoscopic surgery has emerged as a viable treatment option for cervical stenotic myelopathy, offering several advantages over conventional approaches. In multilevel cervical myelopathy, traditional microscopic laminoplasty via the posterior approach requires muscle dissection along the spinous process, which serves as the insertion point for stabilizing muscles, thereby disrupting the posterior tension band. Recently, endoscopic laminoplasty techniques have been explored; however, these often involve detaching the spinous tip from the lamina, compromising the cervical fulcrum. In this report, we introduce a novel surgical technique using a unilateral biportal endoscopy (UBE) system that preserves key cervical structures typically damaged by prior open or endoscopic laminoplasty methods. An 82-year-old man presented with bilateral lower-extremity weakness. Imaging revealed stenosis at C3–4–5 with associated cord signal changes. Maintain anatomy laminoplasty was performed using the UBE system, preserving both the posterior tension band and the spinous process fulcrum. Postoperatively, the modified Japanese Orthopaedic Association and Numeric Rating Scale scores improved. The patient was discharged on postoperative day 4. This new unilateral biportal endoscopic cervical laminoplasty is a safe, effective, and minimally invasive technique that achieves complete decompression in multilevel cervical stenotic myelopathy while maintaining critical anatomical structures.
Ma et al. (Fri,) studied this question.