spinal cord disease Flashcards

1
Q

causes of acute spinal cord compression

A

trauma
tumours
haemorrhage/collapse
infection (abscess)

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2
Q

common metastatic tumours in spinal cord

A

lung
breast
kidney
prostate

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3
Q

chronic causes of cord compression

A

degenerative disease (spondylosis, stenosis, osteoporosis, rheumatoid arthritis)

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4
Q

clinical features of cord compression

A

spine or root pain may precede
leg weakness and sensory loss
arm weakness less severe
bladder and anal sphincter involvement is late

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5
Q

arm weakness and back pain suggests

A

cervical cord lesion

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6
Q

all motor and sensory modalities are affected in

A

complete lesion of spine

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7
Q

name for the condition of hemi-section of the spinal cord (lesion on half of the spinal cord)

A

brown-sequard syndrome

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8
Q

clinical manifestations of brown-sequard syndrome

A

ipsilateral motor signs (weakness)
ipsilateral loss of proprioception and vibration
contralateral loss of pain and temperature

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9
Q

explain the clinical manifestations of brown-sequard syndrome in relation to the spinal tracts

A

corticospinal (motor) and DC (proprioception and vibration) don’t cross until medulla - symptoms on same side as lesion
spinothalamic (pain and temp) have already crossed over in spinal cord - symptoms on contralateral side

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10
Q

what is central cord syndrome

A

hyperflexion/extension injury to an already stenoic neck

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11
Q

clinical manifestations of central cord syndrome

A

distal upper limb weakness
‘cape-like’ spinothalamic sensory loss (pain and temp)
lower limb and dorsal column preserved

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12
Q

treatment for cord compression syndrome due to trauma

A

immobilise + imaging
methylprednisolone
surgery - decompression, stabilise, traction and external fixation

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13
Q

treatment for cord compression syndrome due to infection

A

surgical drainage

anti-biotics

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14
Q

treatment of cord compression due to haemorrhage

A

reverse anti-coagulation

surgical decompression

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