Spinal Cord Lesion And Syndromes Flashcards
Transverse cord lesion
All sensory motor pathways are either partially or completely disrupted.
Due to trauma tumor, multiple sclerosis, and transverse myelitis .
Brown sequard syndrome
Caused by: gunshot wound or tumor
Lateral corticospinal tract affected
DCML affected
Spinothalamic affected
Ipsilateral side:
Upper motor neuron weakness with sensory loss of DCML
Contralateral:
Sensory loss of pain and temperature(spinothalamic) 2 segments below the actual lesion dt lissaures tract
Muscle dysfunction
Impaired movements
Spontaneous movements
Coordination defects
Abnormal reflexes
Muscle tone weakness
Postural and movement distortion
Weakness, wasting and paralysis may be present.
Spinal cord lesion
Causes:
Inflammatory: Ms, transverse myelitis
Infective: HIV infection
Compressive: tumor, disc protrusion, abscess
Vascular: infarction
Anterior horn cell disorders
Pure motor lesion involving a specific myotome ex: C6
Causes: Poliovirus, LMNL with no sensory change. West Nile virus
Symptoms: LMNL
Flaccid paralysis
Hypotonia
Hyporeflexia
Fasciculations
Neuromuscular junction disorders
Myasthenia gravis
Lambert Eaton syndrome
Botulism
Muscle disorders
Muscular dystrophies
Myopathy
Acute hypo/hyperkalemia
Central cord syndrome
Most common lesion! In Cx or tx
Cause: syringomyelia(Arnold chiari malformation), hyperextension, RTA
Bilateral Umnl-anything below the level affected
Spastic paralysis
Hypertonia
Hyperreflexa
Upper limb more affected than lower.
Bilateral LMNL- at lesion level anything below is affected.
Horners syndrome-ptosis, miosis and anhidrosis
Bilateral loss of pain and temperature at level and below.
Cape pattern-syringomyelia
Posterior cord syndrome
More rare!
Caused by Syphillis, fredrichs ataxia, Ms, B12
Affects DCML
Bilateral of Affects:
proprioception, vibration, sensory ataxia
Anterior cord syndrome
MC Lower tx
Caused by: Anterior spinal artery occlusion, thrombus, embolism, trauma (hyperflexion)-> RTA
Damage to descending autonomic fibers.
Causes:
Fecal and urinary incontinence
Loss in corticospinal tract- Bilateral UMNL
Bilateral LMNL at level affected
Bilateral Spinothalamic loss
Only thing kept is DCML