Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-22 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:23


Vascular Disease of Spinal Cord 1519

VASCULAR DISEASE OF SPINAL CORD


MICHAEL J. AMINOFF, MD, DSc

history & physical
■Sudden onset of back or limb pain & of neurologic deficit in limbs or
sphincter disturbance
■Flaccid, areflexic paraparesis leading to spastic paraparesis w/
hyperreflexia & extensor plantar responses
■Sensory deficit in legs; typically is dissociated loss (impaired pinprick
& temperature sensation, preserved postural & vibration sense) w/
cord infarction from occlusion of anterior spinal artery; may be more
global sensory loss w/ hematomas compressing cord
■Brown-Sequard syndrome may occur w/ intrinsic or extrinsic hema-
tomas or occluded branch of anterior spinal artery

tests
■Blood studies: CBC & differential count, ESR, PT & PTT, FBS, LFT,
RPR, cardiac enzymes, cholesterol & lipids, antiphospholipid anti-
bodies
■Imaging studies typically normal initially w/ cord infarction; show
intramedullary, subdural or epidural hematomas

differential diagnosis
■Imaging studies distinguish btwn infarct & hematomas; pts may have
history of bleeding disorder, anticoagulant use or recent trauma or
lumbar puncture
■AVM of spinal cord causes myeloradiculopathy, cord infarction or
spinal subarachnoid hemorrhage; myelogram is required if MRI is
unrevealing

management
■Urgent decompression for subdural or epidural hematomas
■Symptomatic measures, including catheterization for urinary reten-
tion

specific therapy
■Subdural or epidural hematoma requires urgent evacuation.
■Treatment for cord infarction is purely symptomatic.
■AVM can usually be treated by embolization or surgery after angio-
graphic delineation.
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