Tethered cord syndrome is a progressive disease with a typically insidious onset in infants and children, and which can lead to persistent progress of neurological deficits and a high rate of disability without timely intervention. The purpose of this study was to investigate the curative effect of microsurgery in children with different types of tethered cord syndrome. In this study, we analyzed 326 patients with tethered cord syndrome, aged from 2 months to 14 years old, who were followed for 3-36 months after microscopic surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The authors reviewed the treatment of adult patients with congenital intraspinal lipomas with total/near-total resection and discussed their preoperative characteristics, prognostic factors, and surgical outcomes.
Methods: Medical records of 122 adult patients with congenital lumbosacral lipomas undergoing total/near-total resection were systematically analyzed. The cohort was subdivided into 3 groups depending on symptom onset age: group 1 (≤5 years, n = 40), group 2 (>5 years but <18 years, n = 33), and group 3 (>18 years, n = 49).
Copy number variations have been found in patients with neural tube abnormalities. In this study, we performed genome-wide screening using high-resolution array-based comparative genomic hybridization in three children with tethered spinal cord syndrome and two healthy parents. Of eight copy number variations, four were non-polymorphic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Pathophysiology of spinal cord injury (SCI) causes primary and secondary effects leading to loss of neuronal function. The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of rosmarinic acid (RA) in protection against SCI.
Methods: The experimental study was carried out in male wistar rats categorized into three groups.