Object: This paper presents results of a prospective study for patients undergoing surgery for posttraumatic syringomyelia between 1991 and 2010.
Methods: A group of 137 patients with posttraumatic syringomyelia were evaluated (mean age 45 ± 13 years, mean follow-up 51 ± 51 months) with pre- and postoperative MRI and clinical examinations presenting in this period and followed prospectively by outpatient visits and questionnaires. Surgery was recommended for symptomatic patients with a progressive course. Short-term results were determined within 3 months of surgery, whereas long-term outcomes in terms of clinical recurrences were studied with Kaplan-Meier statistics.
Results: Three groups were distinguished according to the type of trauma: Group A, patients with spinal trauma but without cord injury (ASIA E, n = 37); Group B, patients with an incomplete cord injury (ASIA C or D, n = 55); and Group C, patients with complete loss of motor function or a complete cord injury (ASIA A or B, n = 45). Overall, 61 patients with progressive symptoms underwent 71 operations. Of these operations, 61 consisted of arachnolysis, untethering, and duraplasty at the trauma level (that is, decompression), while 4 ASIA A patients underwent a cordectomy. The remaining procedures consisted of placement of a thecoperitoneal shunt, 2 opiate pump placements, and 2 anterior and 1 posterior cervical decompression and fusion. Seventy-six patients were not treated surgically due to lack of neurological progression or refusal of an operation. Neurological symptoms remained stable for 10 years in 84% of the patients for whom surgery was not recommended due to lack of neurological progression. In contrast, 60% of those who declined recommended surgery had neurological progression within 5 years. For patients presenting with neurological progression, outcome was better with decompression. Postoperatively, 61% demonstrated a reduction of syrinx size. Although neurological symptoms generally remained unchanged after surgery, 47% of affected patients reported a postoperative improvement of their pain syndrome. After 3 months, 51% considered their postoperative status improved and 41% considered it unchanged. In the long-term, favorable results were obtained for Groups A and C with rates for neurological deterioration of 6% and 14% after 5 years, respectively. In Group B, this rate was considerably higher at 39%, because arachnolysis and untethering to preserve residual cord function could not be fully achieved in all patients. Cordectomy led to neurological improvement and syrinx collapse in all 4 patients.
Conclusions: The technique of decompression with arachnolysis, untethering, and duraplasty at the level of the underlying trauma provides good long-term results for patients with progressive neurological symptoms following ASIA A, B and E injuries. Treatment of patients with posttraumatic syringomyelia after spinal cord injuries with preserved motor functions (ASIA C and D) remains a major challenge. Future studies will have to establish whether thecoperitoneal shunts would be a superior alternative for this subgroup.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2012.5.SPINE11904 | DOI Listing |
Int J Spine Surg
January 2025
Spine and Orthopedic Surgery, Swiss Paraplegic Center, Nottwil, Switzerland
Background: Spinal cord tethering and syringomyelia after trauma are well-known pathologies in patients suffering from spinal cord injury (SCI). In symptomatic cases, various surgical options are available, but untethering and expansion duraplasty is the currently preferred treatment strategy. However, patient outcomes are usually limited by rather high rates of surgical revisions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Surg
November 2024
Spine and Orthopedic Surgery, Swiss Paraplegic Center, Nottwil, Switzerland.
Neurocirugia (Astur : Engl Ed)
November 2024
University Caxias do Sul, Brazil.
Children (Basel)
August 2024
Department of Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Inje University, 75 Bokji-ro, Busanjin-gu, Busan 47392, Republic of Korea.
This review highlights the need for therapeutic guidelines for syringomyelia associated with tethered cord syndrome (TCS) caused by spinal dysraphism (SD). A comprehensive literature review was conducted, selecting twelve articles to analyze common therapeutic strategies. Surgical cord untethering alone has recently become a preferred treatment, with 45 ± 21.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurg Neurol Int
July 2024
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Toyama, Toyama, Japan.
Background: Most posttraumatic syringomyelias occur in the cervical or thoracic spinal cord, where they contribute to myelopathic deficits. Here, a 40-year-old patient presented with the left leg monoparesis due to syringomyelia involving the conus medullaris 10 years after an L2 vertebral "crush" fracture.
Case Description: Ten years following an L2 vertebral "crush" fracture, a 40-year-old male presented with the new onset of left lower leg paresis.
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