Deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary thromboembolism are major complications in patients with acute spinal cord injury. The incidence of DVT in patients with a spinal cord injury has ranged ...from 5% to 26% in several countries; however, the incidence in Japan is unknown.
We retrospectively assessed 52 patients with acute cervical spinal cord injury. According to the American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale (AIS) at admission, 17 patients were grade A, 15 grade B, 17 grade C, and 3 grade D. These patients were assessed for a DVT using color Doppler ultrasonography (US) regardless of whether they were symptomatic. As standard protocol, we perform Doppler US 5 days after injury; however, this retrospective research included patients who were assessed 2-13 days after injury.
In this study, 11 of 52 (21%) patients had DVT. Three patients had DVT of the right leg, six of the left leg, and two of bilateral legs. There were two proximal-type DVTs and nine distal-type DVTs. No patients had a symptomatic thrombopulmonary embolism. In all, 10 of 41 (24%) men had DVT and 1 of 11 (9%) women had DVT (P = 0.26). A total of 7 of 32 (22%) patients who had complete motor palsy (AIS A or B) had DVT, and 4 of 20 (20%) with incomplete motor palsy (AIS C or D) had DVT (P = 0.58). DVT was found 2-13 days after injury.
In this study of the Japanese population, 11 of 52 (21%) patients with acute cervical spinal cord injury had DVT. Several studies showed there were no differences in the incidence of DVT between patients with complete or incomplete palsy, and our study showed the same results. Many asymptomatic patients had DVT, so asymptomatic patients should not be neglected.
Background: Spontaneous coved ST-segment elevation ≥2mm followed by a negative T-wave in the right precordial leads (type 1 Brugada ECG) is diagnostic of Brugada syndrome (BS), but there is a ...false-positive rate. Methods and Results: Computer-processed analysis of a 12-lead ECG database containing 49,286 females and 52,779 males was performed to select patients with a spontaneous type 1 Brugada ECG for an examination of the association of this ECG characteristic with long-term prognosis. There were 185 patients with a spontaneous type 1 Brugada ECG and of these, 16 (15 males; mean age, 46.7±14.0 years) were diagnosed with BS and 15 patients (all males; mean age, 50.1±13.4 years) were undiagnosed. The PQ interval was significantly longer in the diagnosed patients than in the undiagnosed patients (187.4±28.3ms vs. 161.2±21.5ms; P=0.0073). The T-wave in lead V1 was more negative in the diagnosed patients than in the undiagnosed patients (-170.2±174.6μV vs. -43.2±122.3μV, P=0.027). Multivariate analysis revealed that a PQ interval ≥170ms and T-wave amplitude <105μV in lead V1 were independent risk stratifiers of life-threatening events. Survival analysis (mean follow-up, 78.6±81.8 months) showed that the PQ interval and a negative T-wave in lead V1 were significantly associated with poor prognosis. Conclusions: Analysis of a standard 12-lead ECG can stratify the prognosis of patients with a spontaneous type 1 Brugada ECG. (Circ J 2011; 75: 844-851)
Craniometaphyseal dysplasia is a rare genetic condition characterized by progressive thickening of bones in the skull and metaphyseal abnormalities in the long bones. This disorder often causes ...progressively symptomatic cranial nerve compression, but in rare cases foramen magnum stenosis may lead to quadriplegia. Chiari I malformation with craniometaphyseal dysplasia is extremely rare. The authors report on a 25-year-old woman with myelopathy due to Chiari I malformation along with craniometaphyseal dysplasia. There are only four previous case reports of this condition. The authors present here the fifth case report of this rare condition and summarize its characteristics.
There are a variety of treatment options for patients with spinal metastasis, and predicting prognosis is essential for selecting the proper treatment. The purpose of the present study was to ...identify the significant prognostic factors for the survival of patients with spinal metastasis. We retrospectively reviewed 143 patients with spinal metastasis. The median age was 61 years. Eleven factors reported previously were analyzed using the Cox proportional hazards model:gender, age, performance status, neurological deficits, pain, type of primary tumor, metastasis to major organs, previous chemotherapy, disease-free interval before spinal metastasis, multiple spinal metastases, and extra-spinal bone metastasis. The average survival of study patients after the first visit to our clinic was 22 months. Multivariate survival analysis demonstrated that type of primary tumor (hazard ratio HR = 6.80, p < 0.001), metastasis to major organs (HR = 2.01, p = 0.005), disease-free interval before spinal metastasis (HR = 1.77, p = 0.028), and extra-spinal bone metastasis (HR = 1.75, p = 0.017) were significant prognostic factors. Type of primary tumor was the most powerful prognostic factor. Other prognostic factors may differ among the types of primary tumor and may also be closely associated with primary disease activity. Further analysis of factors predicting prognosis should be conducted with respect to each type of primary tumor to help accurately predict prognosis.
Morphometric analysis.
For safe and solid fixation, it is necessary to measure the diameter of the vertebral arch to ascertain whether or not screws can be used and if so, the appropriate size of ...screws to be used.
Cervical pedicle screws are the most biomechanically stable screws. However, their use carries a high risk of neurovascular complications during screw insertion. In 2004, a new method to avoid such vertebral artery injuries was reported by insertion of screws with crosswise to the lamina of C2. For safe and solid fixation, it is necessary to measure the diameter of the vertebral arch to ascertain whether or not screws can be used and if so, the appropriate size of screws to be used. There is no report of the diameter of the vertebral arch by a navigation system.
Morphometric analysis was performed on 42 patients who had undergone a CT scan of the cervical spine for either surgery or diagnostic purposes. To examine the possibilities to insert laminar screws, the diameter of the vertebral arch was measured using a navigation system.
The diameter of the vertebral arch in C2 was the largest in the cervical spine, individual differences ranging between 0.8 and 8.4 mm. In C2, insertion of screws with a diameter of 3 mm was possible in 80% of males and 63% of females. As for screws with a diameter of 4 mm, insertion was possible in 50% of the males and 24% of the females in C2. In C2, gender had a significant effect, but left-right differences and height did not.
Laminar screws are useful as they can prevent vascular injuries, but a preoperative evaluation is necessary.
An 11 year-old girl had 66 degrees of kyphosis in the thoracolumbar junction. For the purpose of planning for kyphosis correction, we created a 3-D, full-scale model of the spine and consulted spinal ...navigation. Three-dimensional models are generally used as tactile guides to verify the surgical approach and portray the anatomic relations specific to a given patient. We performed posterior fusion from Th10 to L3, and vertebral column resection of Th12 and L1. Screw entry points, directions, lengths and diameters were determined by reference to navigation. Both tools were useful in the bone resection. We could easily detect the posterior element to be resected using the 3D model. During the anterior bony resection, navigation helped us to check the disc level and anterior wall of the vertebrae, which were otherwise difficult to detect due to their depth in the surgical field. Thus, the combination of navigation and 3D models helped us to safely perform surgery for a patient with complex spinal deformity.
A 67-year-old male underwent genetic testing under the diagnosis of Brugada syndrome because of recurrent ventricular fibrillation with coincident ST-segment elevation in either right precordial, ...inferior leads or both since the age of 55 years. Screening of gene mutations using denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC) and direct sequencing identified a novel nonsense mutation (R179X) of SCN5A in a heterozygous manner. The functional assay for the identified mutation, using a whole-cell patch clamp in the heterologous expression system, revealed that the nonsense mutation, located in the second transmembrane segment of the first domain (DI-S2) of the α-subunit, failed to synthesize the complete structure of the cardiac sodium channel, thus causing the non-functional channel. Coding effects by the gene mutation was altered during the 12-year follow-up, which might affect the clinical features of the patient through the ion channel density in the ventricle, dynamics of repolarization abnormality and conduction disturbance. (Circ J 2009; 73: 584 - 588)
Background: Here, we assessed a new trajectory and insertion torque for the placement of a long lateral mass screw (LLMS) that offers stronger posterior fixation versus a shorter lateral mass screw ...(LMS) in the posterior cervical spine. We report a short technical note of the insertion torque of LLMS. Methods: The insertion trajectory/torque was evaluated in 30 patients (10 males and 20 females) undergoing posterior cervical LLMS fusions (2021–2023). Patients averaged 65 years of age. Pathology included eight cervical spine injuries, ten cord injuries, four dislocations/fractures, and eight other entities. Variables studied included the length of the LLMS inserted from C3–7, screw deviation rates, insertion torque, and adverse events. Results: A total of 146 screws were inserted: 11 pedicle screws (PSs) and 135 LLMS. The average insertion torque was 105.9 cNm for PS and 64.9 cNm for LLMS. As the screw lengthened by 1 mm, the insertion torque increased by approximately 4.4 cNm. Conclusion: Here, we documented that the insertion torque of LLMS was 66.1 cNm, greater than the 51.0 cNm for LMS, which should provide stronger posterior cervical fixation.
Objective and importance
A disadvantage of transarticular and C2 pedicle screws is vertebral artery (VA) injury as a result of screw misplacement. If unilateral occlusion of the VA is present, VA ...injury of the dominant side will cause fatal complications as a result of collateral flow insufficiency. Several authors have recently reported the usefulness of C2 laminar screws because of their safety on VA injury. We used transarticular and C2 laminar screws combined with the atlas hook in a patient with C1-2 instability and unilateral VA occlusion, in order to reduce the risk of further VA injury.
Clinical presentation
A 64-year-old woman with rheumatoid atlantoaxial subluxation complained of cervical myelopathy and neck pain. Preoperative MR angiography showed a left side VA occlusion.
Technique
The patient underwent atlantoaxial, posterior fusion using a transarticular screw on the side of the occlusion and a C2 laminar screw on the dominant side combined with a bilateral atlas hook. The transarticular screw was inserted using a navigation system and image intensifier, and the laminar screw was inserted free hand. Bone grafting from the iliac crest was performed.
Conclusion
Transarticular and C2 laminar screws fixation combined with the atlas hook in a patient with unilateral VA occlusion is a useful technique, in order to reduce the risk of further VA injury.
Many authors have reported on iatrogenic vertebral artery (VA) injury, but, to our knowledge, this is the first report of a dominant VA injury with compensatory blood flow from the hypoplastic VA. A ...23-year-old woman with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and atlantoaxial subluxation sustained injury to her dominant VA after occipitocervical fusion using transarticular screws. This did not result in lethal consequences due to compensation from her hypoplastic contralateral VA. Postoperative angiography, however, illustrated occlusion of the dominant left side, while the hypoplastic VA of the right side was enlarged. The patient experienced vertigo and loss of consciousness several times during rehabilitation. At the 4-year follow-up exam, bony fusion was observed, with no neurological deficits or correction loss. She had had no episodes of unconsciousness and no recurrence of any symptoms over the previous 3 years.