15 research outputs found

    Thoracic disc herniation and acute myelopathy: clinical presentation, neuroimaging findings, surgical considerations, and outcome Clinical article

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    Object. Thoracic disc herniations (TDHs) may occasionally present with an acute myelopathy, defined as a variable degree of motor, sensory, and sphincter disturbances developing in less than 24 hours, and resulting in a Frankel Grade C or worse. Confronted with such a patient, the surgeon has to decide whether to perform an emergency operation and whether to use an anterior or posterior approach. The authors analyze their own experience and the pertinent literature, focusing on clinical presentation, imaging findings, surgical timing, technique, and outcome. Methods. Among 250 patients who underwent surgery for symptomatic TDH, 209 had at least 1 year of follow-up at the time of writing, including 8 patients who presented with an acute myelopathy. They were surgically treated using standard thoracoscopic microdiscectomy, careful blood pressure monitoring, and intravenous methylprednisolone. The authors analyzed pre- and postoperative neuroimaging, and Frankel scores preoperatively, at discharge, and 1 year postoperatively. Results. Although 5 patients had multiple TDHs, the symptomatic TDH was invariably situated between T9-10 and T11-12. Seven TDHs were giant, 6 were calcified, 6 were accompanied by myelomalacia, and 4 were accompanied by segmental stenosis. Although sudden dorsalgia was the initial symptom in 6, a precipitating event was noted in only 1. All patients had severe neurological deficits by the time they underwent surgery. Frankel grades improved from B to D in 2 patients, from C to E in 4, and from C to D and B to E in 1 patient each. All patients regained continence and ambulation. Transient complications were CSF leak (in 2 patients), and intraoperative blood loss greater than 1000 ml, reversible ischemic neurological deficit, and subileus (in 1 patient each). Conclusions. Approximately 4% of TDHs present with an acute myelopathy. They are often situated between T9-10 and T11-12, large or giant, and even calcified. They almost invariably cause important cord compression (sometimes aggravated by an associated segmental stenosis) and myelomalacia. Their clinical presentation may be misleading, and diagnosis may be delayed until other causes (especially vascular) have been excluded and the clinical picture has become more complete. Interestingly, whereas a precipitating event or trauma is rarely present, dorsalgia frequently precedes profound myelopathy and may help to make an early diagnosis. Remarkable recovery is possible even with profound neurological deficit, a delay of several days, in the elderly, and in the presence of myelomalacia, provided the spinal cord is adequately decompressed and intraoperative hypotension is strictly avoided. Although alternative approaches more familiar to most neurosurgeons may be used, the anterior transthoracic approach has the advantage of reaching the TDH in front of the compromised spinal cord, avoiding any manipulation. In experienced hands, thoracoscopic microdiscectomy combines the advantage and versatility of an anterior approach with minimal postoperative discomfort. The authors conclude that TDH-related acute myelopathy may have a favorable outcome when managed correctly, and they strongly recommend that every single patient should undergo surgical treatment. (DOI: 10.317112010.12.SPINE10273

    T3-T4 Disc Herniations:Clinical Presentation, Imaging, and Transaxillary Approach

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    OBJECTIVE: To describe a cohort of T3-T4 thoracic disc herniations (TDHs), their clinical and radiologic characteristics, and unique thoracoscopic transaxillary approach (TAA). METHODS: All patients operated on for a T3-T4 TDH with minimal follow-up of 1 year were selected. RESULTS: Eight TAA procedures (6 males and 2 females) were included (1.4%). Six patients reported axial pain, irradiating in 2, 4 sensory changes, 1 objective and 1 merely subjective motor weakness. Only 1 TDH was calcified, none was giant, 2 were accompanied by myelomalacia, and 2 by a small segmental syrinx. A cardiothoracic surgeon helped with exposure through a curved axillary incision using anterior cervical and more recently double-ring wound retractors. All patients were operated on using a 10-mm 30° rigid (three-dimensional) high-definition scope. There were no major complications and a good outcome with symptomatic relief in 7 of 8 patients. CONCLUSIONS: T3-T4 TDHs are infrequent but may be underdiagnosed because they tend to be small and their signs and symptoms may mimic a cervical problem involving the shoulders and even the arms. There may be a male predominance. The TAA is straightforward, safe, efficacious, and well tolerated despite the supposed vulnerability of the upper thoracic spinal cord. Dissection between large crowded subpleural veins characteristic for the upper thoracic spine and ensuring adequate dura decompression when the steep angle may partially obscure the tip of the instruments does require some extra time. Thorough knowledge of the unique anatomy of the upper thorax is mandatory and the assistance of a cardiothoracic surgeon is highly recommended

    Long-term outcome of thalamic deep brain stimulation in two patients with Tourette syndrome

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    International audienceABSTRACT Objective: Thalamic deep brain stimulation for intractable Tourette Syndrome has been introduced in 1999 by Vandewalle et al. In this follow-up study we report on the long-term (6 and 10 years) outcome in terms of tic reduction, cognition and mood and side-effects of medial thalamic DBS in two previously described Tourette patients. Methods: We compared the outcome of two patients at 6 and 10 years after surgery with their preoperative status and after 8 months and 5 years of treatment, respectively. Standardized video recordings were scored by three independent investigators. Both patients underwent (neuro)psychological assessment at all time points of follow-up. Results: Tic improvement observed at 5 years in patient 1 (90.1%) was maintained at 10 years (92.6%). In patient 2 the tic improvement at 8 months (82%) was slightly decreased at 6 years (78%). During follow-up, case 1 revealed no changes in cognition, but case 2 showed a decrease in verbal fluency and learning which was in line with his subjective reports. Case 2 showed a slight decrease in depression but overall psychopathology was still high at 6 years after surgery with an increase in anger and aggression together with difficulties in social adaptation. Besides temporary hardware related complications no distressing adverse effects were observed. Conclusion: Bilateral thalamic stimulation may provide sustained tic benefit after at least 6 years but overall improvement is not obvious. To maximize overall outcome attention is needed for postoperative psychosocial adaptation, already prior to surgery
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