Spinal Cord Compression Flashcards
What can cause acute spinal cord compression?
Trauma
Tumours
Infection
Spontaneous haemorrhage
What usually causes chronic spinal cord compression?
Degenerative disease – spondylosis
Tumours
Rheumatoid Arthritis
What is meant by incomplete cord transection?
Preservation of some power and sensation
What part of the spinal cord is normally affected in rheumatoid arthritis?
C1/2 joint as this has the most synovium
=> loss of the synovium can cause vertebrae to move over each other and compress spinal cord
What symptoms occur in a sensory level cord transection?
All sensation below that level of the spinal cord is lost
What symptoms occur in a motor level cord transection?
All motor function below the level of the compression is affected.
If the level that is affected carries out movements with other levels ABOVE it, then these movements can still be done but will be weaker
What is spinal shock after an acute injury?
- Flacid paralysis of the body due to depolarisation right down the spinal cord
- As muscles are flacid and lose all tone, all reflexes are also lost
Why is hypotension after acute spinal cord injury also considered “spinal shock”?
Thoracolumbar outflow of sympathetics is affected by injury
=> BP cannot be maintained and pt becomes hypotensive
Describe the type of cord injury seen in Brown-Sequard syndrome?
Hemisection of cord
=> ONE SIDE ONLY IS CUT
What symptoms are seen in Brown-Sequard Syndrome?
Ipsilateral fine touch/vibration loss (dorsal column) Ipsilateral weakness (corticospinal tract) Contralateral loss of pain/temp sensation (spinothalamic)
What type of injury usually causes a central cord syndrome?
Hyperflexion or extension injury to already stenotic neck
What type of patient usually presents with a central cord syndrome?
Older patient after a fall
What symptoms indicate a central cord syndrome?
Distal upper limb weakness (as motor control of hands = most medial => falls within centre part of cord that is damaged)
“Cape-like” spinothalamic sensory loss over back and shoulders
Do upper or lower motor neuron signs predominate in a chronic spinal cord compression?
UPPER motor neuron signs predominate
usually in lower limbs
What segment of the spine is most likely to get injured during trauma?
Cervical spine (most mobile)
What type or tumour most commonly compresses the spinal cord?
Extradural
=> Metastases to bone
(from breast, lung, kidney, prostate)
What types of tumour can arise inside the dura (intradural) and cause spinal cord compression?
Extramedullary => inside meninges but outside spinal cord
- Meningioma
- Schwannoma
- Intramedullary => tumour OF THE SPINAL CORD - Astrocytoma
- Ependymoma (cells lining spinal canal)
Explain how tumours can cause acute and chronic compression of the spinal cord
Can slowly compress => chronic
Can cause acute compression by collapse or haemorrhage
What degenerative changes in the spinal cord can cause spinal canal stenosis?
- osteophyte formation - bulging of intervertebral discs - facet joint hypertrophy - subluxation (due to joint incompetence letting bones move)
How are spinal cord compressions due to trauma investigated and treated?
Ix = CT (standard), MRI for potential tumour
Tx = Surgery - decompress (traction) and stabilise (external/internal fixation)
Why is traction used as a form of decompression in treating traumatic spinal cord injury?
Traction causes any subluxations to slip back into almost normal position
=> easier to fixate
Methylprednisolone does not have much added benefit in treating spinal cord trauma patients. TRUE/FALSE?
TRUE
- no clear benefit, but drug is sometimes given as a last resort
How are metastatic tumours compressing the spinal cord treated?
Dexamethasone IV (allows time to carry out investigations)
- Radiotherapy
- Chemotherapy (if chemosensitive e.g. myeloma)
- Surgical decompression and stabilisation IF REQUIRED
When would surgical decompression and stabilisation NOT be performed in patients with metastases compressing their spinal cord?
If the cancer was so advanced that their prognosis is poor regardless
No surgery means they can spend their time at home with family, rather than in hospital suffering surgical complications
How are primary tumours compressing the spinal cord treated?
Surgical excision
How is an infection, which is causing spinal cord compression, treated?
Antimicrobial therapy
Surgical drainage
Stabilisation where required
How are haemorrhages causing spinal cord compression treated?
Reverse anticoagulation
Surgical decompression
How is degenerative disease which is compressing the spinal cord treated?
Surgical decompression +/- stabilisation
What group of patients are likely to demonstrate a Brown-Sequard syndrome and why?
Patients with MS or other demyelinating disorders as the plaque formation is often asymmetrical on spinal cord