Extradural lipomatosis presenting with paraplegia. (9/280)

An unusual case with spinal extradural lipomatosis in a non-obese and otherwise healthy man is reported. The patient presented with a history of weakness of legs which progressed to paraplegia over a 40 day period.  (+info)

Juvenile muscular atrophy of distal upper extremity (Hirayama disease). (10/280)

This disease is characterized by initially progressive muscular weakness and wasting of the distal upper limb(s) in young people predominantly in men, followed by a spontaneous arrest within several years. This disease has been thought to be separate from motor neuron diseases, yet some authors still consider the illness a variant of motor neuron disease. However, the pathological evidence of ischemic changes in the lower cervical anterior horn should facilitate differentiation of the disorder from degenerative motor neuron disease. Recent radiological investigations proved compressive flattening of the lower cervical cord due to forward displacement of the cervical dural sac and spinal cord induced by neck flexion. These findings suggest that sustained or repeated neck flexion may cause ischemic changes in the cervical anterior horn. Application of a cervical collar to minimize neck flexion prevents progressive muscular weakness in an early stage of the disease.  (+info)

Boomerang deformity of cervical spinal cord migrating between split laminae after laminoplasty. (11/280)

Patients with cervical compression myelopathy were studied to elucidate the mechanism underlying boomerang deformity, which results from the migration of the cervical spinal cord between split laminae after laminoplasty with median splitting of the spinous processes (boomerang sign). Thirty-nine cases, comprising 25 patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy, 8 patients with ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament, and 6 patients with cervical disc herniation with developmental canal stenosis, were examined. The clinical and radiological findings were retrospectively compared between patients with (B group, 8 cases) and without (C group, 31 cases) boomerang sign. Moderate increase of the grade of this deformity resulted in no clinical recovery, although there was no difference in clinical recovery between the two groups. Most boomerang signs developed at the C4/5 and/or C5/6 level, where maximal posterior movement of the spinal cord was achieved. Widths between lateral hinges and between split laminae in the B group were smaller than in the C group. Flatness of the spinal cord in the B group was more severe than in the C group. In conclusion, the boomerang sign was caused by posterior movement of the spinal cord, narrower enlargement of the spinal canal and flatness of the spinal cord.  (+info)

Spinal dural arteriovenous fistula associated with syringomyelia. (12/280)

The previously undescribed association of a spinal dural arteriovenous fistula with syringomyelia was found in a 60-year-old male, who developed increasing paresis, numbness of both lower extremities and sphincteric dysfunction. Symptoms and signs were attributed to a syringomyelia at T5-L1 and an arteriovenous spinal dural fistula at L1. The fistula was successfully immobilised with N-butyl-cyano-acrylate. Six months after the procedure, all abnormalities had nearly disappeared. Whether the relation between the fistula and the syringomyelia was coincidental or causative could not be determined.  (+info)

Fluoroscopy-guided lumbar puncture: decreased frequency of traumatic tap and implications for the assessment of CT-negative acute subarachnoid hemorrhage. (13/280)

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: In patients with suspected subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and negative CT findings, the iatrogenic introduction of RBCs into the CSF during lumbar puncture may lead to a misdiagnosis. We tested the hypothesis that the risk of traumatic lumbar puncture is lower with the fluoroscopy-guided technique than with the standard bedside technique. METHODS: Data were collected retrospectively from two populations: adult inpatients undergoing standard bedside lumbar puncture for any reason and adult patients undergoing fluoroscopy-guided lumbar puncture for myelography. Patients with SAH and CSF samples with significant abnormalities other than erythrocytosis (ie, CSF leukocytosis, xanthochromia, or elevated protein) were excluded. In all, 1489 bedside procedures and 723 fluoroscopy-guided procedures met the criteria. RESULTS: We found a significant difference in the level of iatrogenic CSF erythrocytosis produced by the two procedures. Using a cutoff of 1000 cells/mm(3), the frequency of traumatic lumbar puncture was 10.1% for bedside lumbar puncture and 3.5% for fluoroscopy-guided lumbar puncture. With fluoroscopic guidance, the frequency of a traumatic tap varied significantly with the operator, ranging from 0% to 24%. CONCLUSION: The use of fluoroscopy-guided lumbar puncture in patients with suspected SAH and negative CT findings should reduce the frequency of false-positive diagnoses of acute SAH as well as the number of unnecessary angiograms for patients with suspected SAH but no underlying intracranial vascular malformation.  (+info)

Can a short spinal cord produce scoliosis? (14/280)

Some patients with scoliosis have a relatively short vertebral canal. This poses the question of whether a short spinal cord may sometimes cause scoliosis. The present paper presents two observations that may support this concept. It presents a scoliosis model demonstrating what effect a short, unforgiving spinal cord might have on the spinal column. The model uses two flexible parallel tubes with the facility to tighten one. It demonstrates that a short, unforgiving spinal cord could produce the abnormal rotatory anatomy observed at the apex in scoliosis, with first lordosis, then lateral deviation and finally a rotation of the vertebral column, with the rotation occurring between the canal and the vertebral body, around the axis of the cord. The anatomy of the apical vertebra is described from two museum specimens, a computed tomography (CT) myelogram and seven magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies. The study confirms that the vertebral canal and the intervertebral foraminae retain their original orientation. The spinal cord is eccentric in the canal towards the concavity of the curve; the major component of rotation occurs anterior to the vertebral canal and the axis of this rotation seems to be at the site of the spinal cord. These observations do not establish that a short spinal cord will result in scoliosis, but the results are compatible with this hypothesis, and that impairment of spinal cord growth factors may sometimes be responsible for scoliosis.  (+info)

Spinal epidural extraskeletal Ewing sarcoma: MR findings in two cases. (15/280)

SUMMARY: We report the CT myelography and MR findings of two cases of extraskeletal Ewing sarcoma involving the spinal epidural and paravertebral spaces in a middle-aged man (case 1) and a young woman (case 2). In both cases CT myelography showed epidural and paravertebral masses on one side, with widening of the ipsilateral neural foramina at the C5-C6 level in case 1 and at the C7-T1 level in case 2. On MR images, the masses were isointense to muscle on T1-weighted images, hyperintense on T2-weighted images, and showed moderate enhancement on contrast-enhanced T1-weighted images. In one case, all pulse sequences showed linear signal voids, representing the vertebral artery encasement within the mass. The intradural component connected with the main mass was detected in the other case.  (+info)

Familial syringomyelia. (16/280)

Four cases of syringomyelia in two separate families are reported.  (+info)