AI Article Synopsis

  • The authors discuss a case of a 12-year-old boy with diaphragmatic paralysis due to a C1-C2 spinal cord injury from a brain tumor removal.
  • He initially could not breathe on his own after ventilation was removed, presenting with apnea.
  • After 5 months, a neurotization procedure was performed, allowing the right hemidiaphragm to function while paralysis of the left hemidiaphragm remained, leading to reduced reliance on mechanical ventilation during the day.

Article Abstract

The authors present a case of functional improvement of diaphragmatic paralysis in high spinal cord injury, performing a neurotization of the phrenic nerve with accessory spinal nerve hemisection. A C1-C2 injury of the spinal cord was diagnosed in a 12-year-old male, secondary to resection of a brainstem glioma. The patient did not have diaphragmatic motility at the moment that the mechanical ventilation was removed; however, he presented apnea. The patient underwent neurotization of the right phrenic nerve with the right spinal accessory nerve, 5 months after the injury and 6 months after nerve transfer; he had complete mobilization of the right hemidiaphragm, nevertheless persisted with paralysis of the left hemidiaphragm. This achievement reduced the use of mechanical ventilation during the day.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00381-019-04490-9DOI Listing

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