Cases reported "Sciatica"

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1/3. Undiagnosed adult diastematomyelia associated with neurological symptoms following spinal anaesthesia.

    Spinal anaesthesia is a safe, routinely performed procedure. However, in patients with lumbar cutaneous abnormities or deformities of the lower extremities, a previously undetected spinal anomaly may be present. In such patients, it may be prudent to avoid central neuraxial block to prevent neural damage. This instructive case presents such an adult patient in whom previously undiagnosed diastematomyelia, low conus and tethered cord was discovered only in the assessment of postspinal neurological symptoms.
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keywords = anaesthesia
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2/3. Midline prolapse of a lumbar intervertebral disc with compression of the cauda equina.

    Midline prolapse of a disc causing compression of the cauda equina is rare but needs urgent diagnosis and surgical treatment. The onset of bladder and rectal paralysis with saddle anaesthesia should be viewed with a high index of suspicion in a patient with backache and sciatica. Eight cases were seen over a period of five years, and they fell into three clinical groups. Group I patients presented with a sudden onset without any previous symptoms related to the back. Group II patients had a history of recurrent episodes of backache and sciatica, the latest episode resulting in involvement of the cauda equina. The group III patient was indistinguishable from one with a tumour as he presented with backache and sciatica slowly progressing to paralysis of the cauda equina. The prolapse was at the disc between L5 and S1 vertebrae in 50 per cent of the patients, most of whom did not have any limitation of straight leg raising. Urgent myelography and equally urgent removal of the disc within two weeks of the onset of the symptoms resulted in almost complete motor and bladder recovery within five months after the operation in most cases. However, recovery of sensation and sexual function was incomplete even four years after the operation.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = anaesthesia
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3/3. Piriformis pyomyositis mimicking epidural abscess in a parturient.

    A case is presented of a patient who developed fever, leukocytosis, severe back pain, local overlying spinal tenderness, and left leg weakness on the fifth day postpartum. The patient had epidural anaesthesia for ten hours duration, before and during a forceps delivery. Computerized axial tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the pelvis and lumbar spine revealed swelling of the left iliacus and piriformis muscles, but no epidural abscess. A diagnosis of isolated piriformis pyomyositis with secondary sciatic nerve irritation was made, and the patient was treated with intravenous antibiotics, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents, and morphine analgesia. She made a full, uneventful recovery within 50 days, and was discharged requiring no medications.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = anaesthesia
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