Spinal Cord Disease Flashcards
Define Myelopathy vs Radiculopathy?
Myelopathy is a category of spinal cord disease affecting fibres above the Ventral Horn cells, also called Cord lesions
(Can affect any types of nerve fibre depending on the location and extent of the lesion, so what tracts it hits)
Radiculopathy is a category of spinal cord diseases affecting fibres below the ventral horn cell, also called Root lesions because they effect the nerve roots
How could a myelopathy affecting UMNs appear?
- Spasticity
- Hyperreflexia & Plantar Extension
- Pyramidal pattern of weakness
Weakness in lower limb flexors and upper limb extensors
How could a myelopathy affecting LMNs appear?
- Decreased Tone
- Hyporeflexia
- Weakness & Wasting
How could a myelopathy affect sensation?
Can trigger a sensory level:
- If theres a lesion at T4 cutting off the sensory fibres youll get abnormal sensation below T4
A hemicord lesion causes Brown-Sequard Syndrome
What is Brown-Sequard Syndrome?
Tell tale sensory sign of a hemicord lesion
- Lose Contralateral pain & temp (Spinothalamic)
- Lose Ipisilateral muscle strength, vibration, proprioception & mechanoreception (CST/Dorsal Column)
How would a radiculopathy (root lesion) present?
With sensory and motor features isolated to that spinal nerve
Hence its important to know your dermatomes/myotomes
What kind of ANS symptoms can come from spinal cord disease?
Bowel & Bladder problems
Sexual Dysfunction
How would a lesion at C5 pressing on the cord & nerve root present?
Cord
- UMN signs below C5
- Possible Sensory level at C5
Root:
- Numbness in C5 dermatome
- Weakness in C5 muscles (Deltoids/biceps)
- Hyporeflexia in Biceps reflex (C5 LMN is compressed)
How do we categorise the causes of spinal cord lesions>?
Into intrinsic causes which are non-compressive and largely medical
Into Extrinsic causes which are compressive and largely surgical
List the categories of Spinal cord tumours? (Type of extrinsic spinal cord lesion)
Extradural
Intradural & Extramedullary
Intramedullary (These are intrinisic spinal cord lesions)
What are the causes of intrinsic (Non-compressive) spinal cord lesiosn?
- Inflammatory e.g. Demyelinating Myelitis such as MS
- Vascular (mostly Ischaemic vs haemorrhagic)
- Viral e.g. HIV, EBV, CMV, Herpes simplex
- Bacterial e.g. TB
- Schistosomiasis
- Metabolic e.g. B12 Deficiency
- Malingnant e.g. intramedullary tumour or paraneoplastic
- Idiopathic
- Congenital & Genetic
Whats another name for Ischaemic Myelopathies?
Spinal Stroke
And what causes Ischaemic Myelopathies?
Literally anything that can damage your arteries incl:
- Atheromatous disease
- Thromboemboli from Endocarditis or AF
- Hypotension
- Vasculitis
- Venous Occlusion
- Air emboli (A possible presentation of decompression sickness)
How would ischaemic myelopathy present?
- First they will probably have vascular risk factors
- The onset will be sudden or over several hours
- Radicular Back Pain and/or visceral referred pain
- Weakness
- Numbness/Paraaesthesia
- Urinary retention in spinal shock and incontinence after
What does radicular pain mean?
Pain radiating down a dermatome due to irritation of the nerve root, a radiculopathy