The evolution of MRI to predict outcome in spinal cord injury: from signal change to functional imaging.

NeuroImage ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. S68
Author(s):  
D.W. Cadotte ◽  
M.G. Fehlings
Spinal Cord ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
David McKean ◽  
Sarim Ather ◽  
Amar Gandhi ◽  
Talia Hubble ◽  
Maurizio Belci ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 921-925 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason S. Cheng ◽  
R. Mark Richardson ◽  
Alisa D. Gean ◽  
Shirley I. Stiver

The authors report the case of a patient who presented with a hoarse voice and left hemiparesis following a gunshot injury with trajectory entering the left scapula, traversing the suboccipital bone, and coming to rest in the right lateral medullary cistern. Following recovery from the hemiparesis, abrupt quadriparesis occurred coincident with fall of the bullet into the anterior spinal canal. The bullet was retrieved following a C-2 and C-3 laminectomy, and postoperative MR imaging confirmed signal change in the cord at the level where the bullet had lodged. The patient then made a good neurological recovery. Bullets can fall from the posterior fossa with sufficient momentum to cause an acute spinal cord injury. Consideration for craniotomy and bullet retrieval should be given to large bullets lying in the CSF spaces of the posterior fossa as they pose risk for acute spinal cord injury.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 562-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allan D Levi ◽  
David O Okonkwo ◽  
Paul Park ◽  
Arthur L Jenkins ◽  
Shekar N Kurpad ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Human central nervous system stem cells (HuCNS-SC) are multipotent adult stem cells with successful engraftment, migration, and region-appropriate differentiation after spinal cord injury (SCI). OBJECTIVE To present data on the surgical safety profile and feasibility of multiple intramedullary perilesional injections of HuCNS-SC after SCI. METHODS Intramedullary free-hand (manual) transplantation of HuCNS-SC cells was performed in subjects with thoracic (n = 12) and cervical (n = 17) complete and sensory incomplete chronic traumatic SCI. RESULTS Intramedullary stem cell transplantation needle times in the thoracic cohort (20 M HuCNS-SC) were 19:30 min and total injection time was 42:15 min. The cervical cohort I (n = 6), demonstrated that escalating doses of HuCNS-SC up to 40 M range were well tolerated. In cohort II (40 M, n = 11), the intramedullary stem cell transplantation needle times and total injection time was 26:05 ± 1:08 and 58:14 ± 4:06 min, respectively. In the first year after injection, there were 4 serious adverse events in 4 of the 12 thoracic subjects and 15 serious adverse events in 9 of the 17 cervical patients. No safety concerns were considered related to the cells or the manual intramedullary injection. Cervical magnetic resonance images demonstrated mild increased T2 signal change in 8 of 17 transplanted subjects without motor decrements or emerging neuropathic pain. All T2 signal change resolved by 6 to 12 mo post-transplant. CONCLUSION A total cell dose of 20 M cells via 4 and up to 40 M cells via 8 perilesional intramedullary injections after thoracic and cervical SCI respectively proved safe and feasible using a manual injection technique.


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