Spinal Cord Syndromes Myelopathy Flashcards

1
Q

Myelopathy?

A

Any disease that affects the spinal cord

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2
Q

If a patient points where in back should you be concerned?

A

Thoracic cord

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3
Q

Damage to corticospinal tract result in?

A

Hyper-reflexia, spasticity, + Babinskis sign, weakness

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4
Q

Damage to posterior column result in?

A

Loss of vibration, position sense, and + Romberg Sign

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5
Q

Damage to spinothalamic tract result in?

A

Loss of pain and temperature, sensory level

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6
Q

Damage to anterior horn cells result in?

A

Flaccid weakness, hypo-reflexia, fasciculation

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7
Q

Damage to root result in?

A

Lancinating pain, numbness, hypo-reflexia

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8
Q

Where is dermatome for T4 located? T10?

A

Nipple line

Umbilicus

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9
Q

Acute central lesions cause what type of bladder dysfunction?

A

Flaccid, acontractile (atonic) bladder with continued reflex contraction of urethral sphincter. Urinary retention, bladder distention, and overflow incontinence

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10
Q

Chronic central lesions cause what type of bladder dysfunction?

A

Hyperreflexic (spastic) bladder. Urinary frequency and urge incontinence caused by detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia

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11
Q

Acute and sub-acute myelopathies are what?

A

NEUROLOGIC EMERGANCIES

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12
Q

Early (A) in the progression of epidural lesions of the spinal cord?

A
Motor symptoms (compression of corticospinal tract) hyperreflexia, +Babinski's sign, difficulty walking
Sensory - root irritation, hypersensitive to touch, band or girdle-like sensation in abdomen
Urinary urgency
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13
Q

The second (B) progression of epidural lesions of the spinal cord?

A

Motor - Legs are spastic and week, brisk reflexes, babinsky sign still present
Sensory - root are is totally numb (IPSILATERAL), Pain in CONTRALATERAL LE is decreased (spinothalamic)
Partial Brown-Sequard
Definite sphincter dysfunction

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14
Q

The final (C) progression of epidural lesions of the spinal cord?

A

Motor - Flaccid, arflexic due to spinal cord shock or spastic papaparesis if more chronic/subacute
Sensory - Complete sensory level to all modalities at level of the lesion

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15
Q

Disc disease where can cause epidural cord compression and myelopathy?

A

Cervical or thoracic

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16
Q

Most common cancers that lead to epidural myelopathy?

A

Lung, breast, prostate

17
Q

Where does most metastatic cancer begin?

A

vertebral body

18
Q

Where does most spinal abscesses begin?

A

Disc space

19
Q

The common infection of the spinal cord?

A

S. Aureus

20
Q

Pott’s disease?

A

Neurologic syndrome of osteomyelitis resulting from TB infection

21
Q

If you see dumbbell shape on MRI what do you think?

A

Schwannoma/neurofibroma

22
Q

Early (A) progression of a central cord lesion?

A

Pain in shoulders (cervical lesion), Loss of pain/temperature, crossing spinothalamic tracts are involved early

23
Q

(B) progression of a central cord lesion?

A

Reflexes are lost in arms (lesion involves root entry zones), Loss of pain/temperature is severe (pt my burn himself), Horner’s syndrome, Touch and position are intact, legs develop spastic paraparesis, + Babinski signs and hyperreflexia due to corticospinal damage.

24
Q

(C) progression of a central cord lesion?

A

Sacral Sparing, may involve the face due to the sensory nucelus of the trigeminal nerve

25
Q

Anterior 2/3 of the spinal cord is supplied by?

A

Artery of Adamkiewicz (Great radicular artery)

26
Q

Anterior spinal artery syndrome?

A

Spinothalamic and corticospinal dysfunction with intact posterior column function

27
Q

Brown-sequard hemi-section syndrome?

A

Rare - stab wound, some myelitis
Ipsilateral spastic paralysis below the level of the lesion
Hyper-reflexia, + Babinski signs
Ipsilateral loss of vibration and joint position sense
Contralateral loss of pain/temp