Cases reported "Trauma, Nervous System"

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1/2. Bilateral multiple cervical root avulsions without skeletal or ligamentous damage resulting from blast injury: case report.

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: We describe a unique case of multiple bilateral cervical root injuries without ligamentous or bony injury secondary to a sandblast accident. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 19-year-old man sustained a sandblast injury to his face, neck, chest, and upper extremities, with immediate loss of motor and sensory function occurring in both of his upper extremities. Cervical spine x-rays, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated no fracture, soft tissue abnormality, or malalignment. The restriction of deficits to the patient's upper extremities suggested a central cervical spinal cord injury, bilateral brachial injuries, or a conversion disorder. INTERVENTION: Cervical computed tomographic myelography revealed multiple bilateral nerve root injuries. CONCLUSION: This case report is unique in the literature in that it describes a patient with multiple cervical nerve root injuries secondary to sandblast injury without ligamentous or bony injury. Although magnetic resonance imaging remains the diagnostic modality of choice in patients with acute spinal cord injury, it is deficient in demonstrating cervical root injury in the acute setting. In this setting, computed tomographic myelography is superior.
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2/2. Symptomatic cervical disc herniation in a pediatric Klippel-Feil patient: the risk of neural injury associated with extensive congenitally fused vertebrae and a hypermobile segment.

    STUDY DESIGN: A case report. OBJECTIVE: To report the occurrence of a herniated cervical disc following a high-impact activity in a pediatric Klippel-Feil patient who presented with spinal cord compression, myelopathy, and myelomalacia requiring posterior instrumented fusion followed by an anterior discectomy and fusion at the hypermobile nonfused segment. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: The primary hallmark of klippel-feil syndrome (KFS) is the presence of at least one congenitally fused cervical segment. Studies have reported the potential risk of cervical injury from hypermobility associated with the nonfused cervical segment in KFS. The manifestation of a cervical disc herniation in the pediatric KFS patient is rare. To the authors' knowledge, the development of a symptomatic cervical herniated disc attributed to mechanical fatigue following a high-impact activity has not been addressed in the literature with respect to the pediatric KFS patient having extensive cervical fusion and a hypermobile segment. methods: A 16.8-year-old KFS boy with occipitalization of C1 and fusion of C2-C3 and C4-T1 presented with myelopathy, severe cord compression, and myelomalacia stemming from a left-sided herniated cervical disc at C3-C4 with onset following an 8-foot high rooftop jump. On radiographic evaluation, the patient's C3-C4 segment was hypermobile. RESULTS: The patient was operatively managed via a same-day combined posterior-anterior procedure. The posterior aspect of the procedure entailed a posterior lateral mass plate-screw fixation at C3-C4 with autologous iliac crest bone fusion. Anteriorly, a discectomy was performed at C3-C4 with application of an interbody tricortical autograft. After surgery, the patient wore a halo vest for 3 months, followed by a soft collar for an additional 3 months. On final follow-up at 39 months, the patient was asymptomatic with no instrumentation-related complications, fusion of the posterior graft-bed and anterior interbody graft was noted, and cervical alignment was maintained. CONCLUSIONS: A hypermobile segment in the pediatric KFS patient is a risk factor that may lead to cord compression. A symptomatic herniated cervical disc may develop from an excessive mechanical load stress in a pediatric KFS patient with multiple fused segments. In such a patient, a same-day combined posterior-anterior procedure provides cord decompression and stabilizes the spine with a favorable outcome.
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