AI Article Synopsis

  • SCIWORA refers to spinal cord injuries that exhibit symptoms without visible fractures or instability on X-rays or CT scans, and it's particularly rare in adults, especially in the thoracic spine.
  • A case study is presented of a 38-year-old man who experienced weakness in his right leg due to rapid rotational and stretching movement of the spinal cord, leading to a diagnosis of SCIWORA at the T4 level with Brown-Sequard syndrome (BBS).
  • After two months of treatment, the patient regained the ability to walk independently, highlighting the need for clinicians to recognize SCIWORA to avoid misdiagnosis and enhance treatment effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormality (SCIWORA) is a term that denotes clinical symptoms of traumatic myelopathy without radiographic or computed tomographic features of vertebral fracture or instability. However, SCIWORA in adults is very rare, especially that involving the thoracic spine. We describe the case of a 38-year-old man who complained of weakness in the right lower extremity for two hours. The injury occurred due to rapid spinal cord rotation-stretching. The patient was diagnosed with SCIWORA at the T4 level, manifesting as Brown-Sequard syndrome (BBS). Finally, he was able to walk independently without assistance after two-month treatment. SCIWORA due to spinal cord rotation-stretching injury, manifesting as BSS, is a very rare mechanism of injury. When X-ray and CT scans rule out the diagnosis of spinal fractures, SCIWORA should be suspected. We recommend that clinicians should have a comprehensive and systematic understanding of this disease to greatly reduce misdiagnosis and improve the level of treatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.47391/JPMA.7779DOI Listing

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