1 / 72

Section of Spinal cord Clinical correlation

Section of Spinal cord Clinical correlation. 三總神經科部 宋岳峰醫師 March 10, 2014. Introduction. Extends from the foramen magnum where it is continuous with the medulla to the level of the first or second lumbar vertebrae 40 to 50 cm long and 1 cm to 1.5 cm in diameter

bmelissa
Télécharger la présentation

Section of Spinal cord Clinical correlation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Section of Spinal cordClinical correlation 三總神經科部 宋岳峰醫師 March 10, 2014

  2. Introduction • Extends from the foramen magnum where it is continuous with the medulla to the level of the first or second lumbar vertebrae • 40 to 50 cm long and 1 cm to 1.5 cm in diameter • Two consecutive rows of nerve roots emerge on each of its sides. These nerve roots join distally to form 31 pairs of spinal nerves

  3. There are 31 segments, defined by 31 pairs of nerves exiting the cord 8 cervical 12 thoracic 5 lumbar 5 sacral 1 coccygeal nerve Dorsal and ventral roots enter and leave the vertebral column respectively through intervertebral foramen at the vertebral segments corresponding to the spinal segment Coccygeal

  4. Intervertebral foramen

  5. Dorsal and ventral roots

  6. Dermatome

  7. General Features • Carry sensory information from the body and some from the head to the central nervous system (CNS) via afferent fibers • Motor neurons in the ventral horn project their axons into the periphery to innervate skeletal and smooth muscles • Mediate autonomic control for most of the visceral functions

  8. C8 Level

  9. Cross immediately (or sometimes first travels up one or two segments in the cord); therefore contralateral ANTEROLATERAL SYSTEM (spinothalamic tract): PAIN TEMPERATURE CRUDE TOUCH

  10. Travels ipsilaterally in the cord and crosses in the medulla DORSAL COLUMN - MEDIAL LEMNISCUS PATHWAY : DISCRIMINATIVE TOUCH JOINT POSITION VIBRATION

  11. Corticospinal Tract: Carries motor commands from the brain 80% decussate to lateral corticospinal tract 20% continue ipsilaterally as the medial corticospinal tract

  12. Clinical Practice

  13. Longitudinal Localization

  14. High C-spine • Usually associated with trauma - Atlas ring burst (diving), C2 pedicle fracture with subluxation - Involves quadriparesis and respiratory failure (phrenic nerve: C3, C4, C5)

  15. Low C-spine • Biceps weakness: C5, C6 • Triceps, wrist extensors, and pronator weakness: C7 • Hand weakness: C8, T1 • Sensory loss over arms

  16. Thoracic spine • High thoracic spine and low C-spine have sympathetic nervous system involvement (hypotension, bradycardia, Horner’s syndrome) • Sensory level found along the trunk • Some degree of weakness in the leg

  17. Horner’s syndrome • Miosis • Ptosis • Anhydrosis

  18. Lumbar spine • Weakness in the legs • Sensory changes in the legs and saddle area • Conus medullaris: bowel/bladder involvement

  19. Cauda equina • Lower motor signs of flaccidity, areflexia and weakness but with bowel/bladder involvement and sensory level in saddle up to L1

  20. Patterns of Sensory Loss

  21. Patterns of Sensory Loss Vibration sense Posterior column spinal cord syndrome: B12 deficiency, Friedrich’s ataxia

  22. Patterns of Sensory Loss Pain and temperature Cape Anesthesia Central spinal cord syndrome: Syringomyelia, Intrinsic spinal cord tumor

  23. Patterns of Sensory Loss Pain and temperature, contralateral to lesion Position, vibration sense, ipsilateral to lesion All modalities, at lesion Brown-Sequard Syndrome: Extrinsic spinal cord tumor

  24. Patterns of Sensory Loss All modalities Complete spinal cord transection: trauma, transverse myelitis

  25. Spinal cord abnormalities

  26. Demyelinating disease Tumor Vascular disease Inflammatory disease Infection Spinal cord abnormalities

  27. Demyelinating diseases • Multiple Sclerosis • Transverse Myelitis (TM)

  28. Tumor • Astrocytoma: slowly progressive • Ependymoma, hemangioblastoma • Metastases to the cord are very uncommon

  29. Vascular disease • Distant vascular occlusion or aortic disease with thrombosis, dissection, or surgical clamping • Sometimes with microscopic fragments of herniated nucleus pulposus • Arteriovenous malformations (AVM) may cause ischemia

  30. Vascular disease

  31. Anterior cord syndrome • Involve the spinothalamic and corticospinal tracts, giving paresis and loss of pain below the level • Usually associated with cord compression, but also can be seen with infarction of the anterior spinal artery

  32. Infarction of the anterior spinal artery

  33. Cord compression

  34. Inflammatory • Vasculitis

  35. Infection • Herpes zoster: radicular pain with dermatomal eruption

  36. Poliomyelitis: destroys anterior horn cells • Retroviruses HTLV-1 (Tropical spastic paraparesis) and HIV-1 • Neurosyphilis: tabes dorsalis-lancinating pains, dorsal column loss, slapping gait

  37. Degenerative diseases • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) • Spinal muscular atrophy • Friedreich’s ataxia Stephen Hawking suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

  38. Metabolic diseases • Subacute combined degeneration - Vitamin B12 deficiency leading to demyelination of the posterior columns and spreading secondarily to the corticospinal tract - Some peripheral nerve involvement - Symptoms including paresthesias, loss of vibratory and position sensation, weakness and spasticity of the legs

  39. Case Discussion

  40. Case 1 • A 38-year-old woman • Sudden onset of sharp pain at the back of her neck on waking in the morning • Progressive numbness and weakness in her four limbs a few minutes later • Difficulty breathing and urinary retention when she was taken to the ER

  41. No history of trauma, neck pain, fever, skin rash, or recent illness • Medical history is unremarkable • Denied smoking, drinking and use of illicit drugs • No any significant family history

More Related