Holy moly- multiple paragraphs would help me for the next response.
First, increased pain after ACDF surgery that is the same pain but more intense should in my opinion have a work-up. Normally, the shoulder and arm pain is improved significantly. There can be new aching between the shoulder blades which is caused by the restoration of disc height (by the stretch of the previously contracted posterior ligaments).
I assume that your level (C5-6 or both C5-6 and C6-7???) did not fuse after surgery which is why you need a revison surgery. There should not be much motion in this area (called a pseudoarthosis) so your complaint of increasing pain with motion could be an indication of a problem at another level.
You still have significant residual compression at the C5-6 level (“At C5-6 there is apparent moderate to severe right and mild to moderate left foraminal narrowing. Right foraminal disc/osteophyte complex and foraminal narrowing appears improved when compared to preoperative study”).
You also have significant compression of the C7 root (“At C6-7 there is moderate to severe right and moderate left foraminal narrowing”).
You have a pseudoarthrosis (lack of fusion) of C5-7 according to your CT scan (“There are large anterior osteophytes at both the C5-6, and C6-7 levels, worse at the right on C5-6. There is incorporation of the intervertebral cage at the superior endplate of C6, but only partial incorporation of the inferior endplate of C5. Very small amount of bony bridging is seen at this motion segment. At C6-7, there is incorporation of the intervetebral cage to the inferior endplate of C6, but only partial incorporation to the superior endplate of C7. There is productive bone at the disc space, but no intervertebral body bony bridging”).
I would agree with the second surgeon. You need to have the plate and cages removed, have a redo decompression of the C5-7 levels and use autograft (your own hip bone) and a plate. In my opinion, this will give the best results by removing the anterior osteophytes and making sure the two levels have the best chance of healing.
Dr. Corenman
Donald Corenman, MD, DC is a highly-regarded spine surgeon, considered an expert in the area of neck and back pain. Trained as both a Medical Doctor and Doctor of Chiropractic, Dr. Corenman earned academic appointments as Clinical Assistant Professor and Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, and his research on spine surgery and rehabilitation has resulted in the publication of multiple peer-reviewed articles and two books.