Visualized Analysis of Global Studies on Cervical Spondylosis Surgery: A Bibliometric Study Based on Web of Science Database and VOSviewer

Indian J Orthop. 2022 Feb 16;56(6):996-1010. doi: 10.1007/s43465-021-00581-5. eCollection 2022 Jun.

Abstract

Purpose: This study used multiple type of bibliometric analysis for identifying and summarizing the publications regarding cervical spondylosis surgery, for clarifying the history of this field, predicting the future hotspots of this field and improving communication among researchers.

Methods: Publications from Web of Science database between 1900 and 2019 were downloaded and analyzed by Excel 2016 and VOSviewer. Bibliometric maps of co-citations and maps of co-occurrence of keywords are constructed by VOSviewer software.

Results: A total of 2110 publications were searched from Web of Science. The total sum of times cited is 40448 with the average citation per publication of 19.17 times. USA published most papers (652, 30.9%). The most productive organizations is University of Toronto (96 publications). Spine (308 publications) published the most publications in this field. In co-citations of references analysis, four clusters of references are constructed by VOSviewer. In co-occurrence of keywords analysis, three clusters of keywords are constructed by VOSviewer. The latest keyword "degenerative cervical myelopathy" appeared in 2017 in 42 papers. Other relatively new keywords include "surgical outcomes", "association", "sagittal alignment", "prognostic-factors" that appeared in 2016 in 33, 31, 34 and 37 papers respectively.

Conclusion: USA dominates the research regarding cervical spondylosis surgery. University of Toronto is the most productive organization in this field. Spine, European Spine Journal and Journal of Neurosurgery Spine are the top three productive journals on publications of cervical spondylosis surgery. "Degenerative cervical myelopathy", "surgical outcomes", "association", "sagittal alignment" and "prognostic-factors" may be the new research hotspots in this field.

Keywords: Bibliometric; Cervical spondylosis; Spine; Surgery; VOSviewer.