Case report of ervical myelopathy due to ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament in association with flavum ligament ossification: MRI and CT appearance

2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 79-83
Author(s):  
Monique Boukobza ◽  
Jurgita Ušinskienė ◽  
Simona Letautienė

Background. Our objective is to analyze the cervical spinal cord damage and spinal canal stenosis due to OPLL which usually affects the cervical spine and leads to progressive myelopathy in 50–60s in Asian population; to demonstrate the mixed type OPLL and to show OPLL specific dural penetration signs: “double- layer” and “C-sign” on imaging. Materials and methods. Subacute cord compression developed over a 3-month period in a 43-year-old Japanese patient. Severe spinal canal narrowing was related to the mixed type OPLL at C3–C4 through C6–C7 associated to flavum ligament ossification at T3–T4. Lateral radiograph of the cervical spine showed intraspinal ossification, CT demonstrated specific dural penetration signs, and MRI disclosed spinal cord compression. Laminectomy at C3–C7 was performed and decompression of the spinal cord was confirmed by postoperative MRI. Conclusions. Absolute cervical stenosis and association with other diseases (like calcification of flavum ligament) predispose the patient to develop more severe deficit earlier in the clinical course. Specific CT signs, “double-layer” and “C-sign”, show dural involvement. MRI is a very useful modality to identify the precise level and extent of the spinal cord injury. OPLL must be included in the differential diagnosis of subacute cervical myelopathy.

2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-9
Author(s):  
Badri Rijal ◽  
R K Pokharel ◽  
S Paudel ◽  
L L Shah

Introduction: Acute cervical trauma occasionally leads to cervical canal stenosis in some individuals in spite of minor trauma. The spinal canal-to-vertebral body ratio (Torg-Pavlov ratio) has been proposed for assessing developmental spinal canal stenosis. It is not affected by magnification, and is measured on lateral plain films of cervical vertebrae. The result of this study may help in better understanding of the Torg’s ratio, which is more reliable than direct measuring of the mid-sagittal diameter of the cervical spinal canal in the diagnosis of cervical spinal stenosis or predicting the prognosis of cervical spinal cord injury. If Torg’s ratio is below normal there is risk of cervical cord injury whereas relatively safe in large Torg’s ratio. Torg’s ratio can be accessed even in rural areas where x-rays are easily available and more economical than MRI and CT scan. It can assess the risk of cord injury during sports and outdoor activities and help individuals’ choose safe carrier in sports or others activities.Methods: In order to ascertain the normal values of the Torg’s ratio in adults Nepalese, hundred sets of cervical vertebral columns of hundred adult Nepalese population of age group 20-40 years were examined. Consecutive patients presenting with history of neck pain with normal x-ray findings or history of trauma without cervical spine injury from Orthopaedic OPD (out patients department) and emergency department of Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, Maharajgunj, Kathmandu from March 2011 to August 2012 were included in the study.Results: There were 48 males and 52 females with age ranging from 20 yrs to 40 yrs with the mean of 30.34±5.36 years. The normal average canal/body ratio of the cervical spine is 0.99 +/- 0.09 in male and 1.01 +/- 0.07 in female. It was observed that the ratio of the antero-posterior diameters of cervical spinal canal and vertebral bodies showed sexual dimorphism.Conclusion: The Torg’s ratio is the same irrespective of gender and height. The result of this study will help in better understanding of the Torg’s ratio, which is more reliable than direct measuring of the mid-sagittal diameter of the cervical spinal canal in the diagnosis of cervical spinal stenosis or predicting the prognosis of cervical spinal cord injury.JSSN 2015; 18 (1), Page: 5-9


Spine ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 605-613 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael G. Fehlings ◽  
Sanjay C. Rao ◽  
Charles H. Tator ◽  
Ghassan Skaf ◽  
Paul Arnold ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Izumi Koyanagi ◽  
Yoshinobu Iwasaki ◽  
Kazutoshi Hida ◽  
Minoru Akino ◽  
Hiroyuki Imamura ◽  
...  

Object. It is known that the spinal cord can sustain traumatic injury without associated injury of the spinal column in some conditions, such as a flexible spinal column or preexisting narrowed spinal canal. The purpose of this study was to characterize the clinical features and to understand the mechanisms in cases of acute cervical cord injury in which fracture or dislocation of the cervical spine has not occurred. Methods. Eighty-nine patients who sustained an acute cervical cord injury were treated in our hospitals between 1990 and 1998. In 42 patients (47%) no bone injuries of the cervical spine were demonstrated, and this group was retrospectively analyzed. There were 35 men and seven women, aged 19 to 81 years (mean 58.9 years). The initial neurological examination indicated complete injury in five patients, whereas incomplete injury was demonstrated in 37. In the majority of the patients (90%) the authors found degenerative changes of the cervical spine such as spondylosis (22 cases) or ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament (16 cases). The mean sagittal diameter of the cervical spinal canal, as measured on computerized tomography scans, was significantly narrower than that obtained in the control patients. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging revealed spinal cord compression in 93% and paravertebral soft-tissue injuries in 58% of the patients. Conclusions. Degenerative changes of the cervical spine and developmental narrowing of the spinal canal are important preexisting factors. In the acute stage MR imaging is useful to understand the level and mechanisms of spinal cord injury. The fact that a significant number of the patients were found to have spinal cord compression despite the absence of bone injuries of the spinal column indicates that future investigations into surgical treatment of this type of injury are necessary.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Batbayar Khuyagbaatar ◽  
Kyungsoo Kim ◽  
Tserenchimed Purevsuren ◽  
Sang-Hun Lee ◽  
Yoon Hyuk Kim

Many clinical case series have reported the predisposing factors for C5 palsy and have presented comparisons of the two types of laminoplasty. However, there have been no biomechanical studies focusing on cervical spinal cord and nerve root following laminoplasty. The purpose of this study is to investigate biomechanical changes in the spinal cord and nerve roots following the two most common types of laminoplasty, open-door and double-door laminoplasty, for cervical ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament (OPLL). A finite element (FE) model of the cervical spine and spinal cord with nerve root complex structures was developed. Stress changes in the spinal cord and nerve roots, posterior shift of the spinal cord, and displacement of the cervical nerve roots were analyzed with two types of cervical laminoplasty models for variations in the degree of canal occupying ratio and shape of the OPLL. The shape and degree of spinal cord compression caused by the OPLL had more influence on the changes in stress, posterior shift of the spinal cord, and displacement of the nerve root than the type of laminoplasty. The lateral-type OPLL resulted in imbalanced stress on the nerve roots and the highest nerve root displacement. Type of laminoplasty and shape and degree of spinal cord compression caused by OPLL were found to influence the changes in stress and posterior displacement of the cervical spinal cord and nerve roots. Lateral-type OPLL might contribute to the development of C5 palsy due to the imbalanced stress and tension on the nerve roots after laminoplasty.


Author(s):  
Marie-Helene Beausejour ◽  
Eric Wagnac ◽  
Pierre-Jean Arnoux ◽  
Jean-Marc Mac-Thiong ◽  
Yvan Petit

Abstract Flexion-distraction injuries frequently cause traumatic cervical spinal cord injury (SCI). Post-traumatic instability can cause aggravation of the secondary SCI during patient's care. However, there is little information on how the pattern of disco-ligamentous injury affects the SCI severity and mechanism. This study objective was to analyze how different flexion-distraction disco-ligamentous injuries affect the SCI mechanisms during post-traumatic flexion and extension. A cervical spine finite element model including the spinal cord was used and different combinations of partial or complete intervertebral disc (IVD) rupture and disruption of various posterior ligaments were modeled at C4-C5, C5-C6 or C6-C7. In flexion, complete IVD rupture combined with posterior ligamentous complex rupture was the most severe injury leading to the most extreme von Mises stress (47 to 66 kPa), principal strains p1 (0.32 to 0.41 in white matter) and p3 (-0.78 to -0.96 in white matter) in the spinal cord and to the most important spinal cord compression (35 to 48 %). The main post-trauma SCI mechanism was identified as compression of the anterior white matter at the injured level combined with distraction of the posterior spinal cord during flexion. There was also a concentration of the maximum stresses in the gray matter after injury. Finally, in extension, the injuries tested had little impact on the spinal cord. The capsular ligament was the most important structure in protecting the spinal cord. Its status should be carefully examined during patient's management.


1997 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Colombo ◽  
C. Maccagnano ◽  
C. Corona ◽  
A. Beltramello ◽  
G. Scialfa

Injury to the cervical spinal cord is a major health problem owing to its frequency and to the often devastating sequelae of serious trauma with respect to long-term disability for the patient. Cervical injuries are often reported in association with head trauma and cervical spinal cord injury appears to be a major contributing factor in acute death secondary to traffic accidents producing severe head injuries. A high incidence of neurological deficits is reported in cervical spinal trauma, but cervical injuries can escape detection in the acute phase if clinically silent or in patients unconscious from to head trauma. The most important predisposing factor in the concomitant occurrence of head and neck trauma is transmission of forces through the cranial vault to the cervical spine. Other underlying cervical spine diseases, either congenital or developmental, may also predispose to the development of cervical injuries. The spine includes bony-ligamentous structures and nervous structures. The bony-ligamentous involucre is anatomically predisposed to perform three major tasks: 1) maintenance of spinal statics; 2) mobilization in the three anatomic planes and 3) protection of nervous and vascular structures inside the spinal canal. The cervical spine is subjected to varying forces of flexion, flexion-rotation, extension and vertical compression which result in damage to the different components of the spine when they are applied beyond physiological limits. Biomechanical considerations of the different motion patterns that occur in the cervical spine are essential to understand the contribution of mechanical stresses to the development of specific spinal injuries. This chapter tackles the problem of a logical management of cervical spinal trauma based on clinical presentation to: a) identify the preferential diagnostic modality to investigate that type of injury (conventional X-Ray, Computed Tomography, Magnetic Resonance); b) interpret images, indipendently from the diagnostic modality utilized, considering the cause-effect relation between the traumatic force and the anatomic-functional structures involved by the trauma. The clinical picture may include pain, movement limitations and/or radiculo-myelopathy. Cerebral neurologic deficits can be the consequence of traumatic damage to the carotid and vertebral artery system in the neck. Evaluation of injury instability is one of the main goals of radiographic investigation. One classifies bony instability which is temporary, as opposed to disco-ligamentous instability which is permanent and usually requires surgical stabilization, and mixed instability. Conventional lateral and antero-posterior radiographs should be initially performed in patients with cervical trauma and in polytrauma and comatous patients who are difficult to assess clinically. They effectively screen vertebral fractures, vertebral body and facet dislocations and pre-vertebral soft tissue swelling. However, ligament disruption and instability can be underestimated by a normal disco-vertebral alignment. Dynamic flexion-extension views, useful to reveal such an instability, should never be performed in the acute phase particularly if fractures and neurologic deficits are present. CT scan, in addition, has several advantages: the axial plane provides an optimal view of the size and shape of the spinal canal, bony fragments and foreign bodies within the canal are very well depicted, posterior element fractures are better visualized. A preexsisting spondylotic narrow canal is well evaluated by CT as are post-traumatic disc herniations. Widening of the apophyseal joints, suggesting disruption of facet capsules and spinal instability, is best demonstrated by CT. However, CT has some limitations in evaluating ligament instability since it is performed in the neutral position and, in addition, it cannot visualize the medulla and its potential traumatic lesions. After the introduction of MRI, myelography and CT-myelography are no longer used to investigate cervical spine lesions involving cord and nerve roots. MRI should be performed in every patient presenting with neurologic deficits. The usefulness of MR is in detecting extradural compressive lesions like disc herniation and haematomas that need to be decompressed surgically. MRI can also evaluate ligamentous integrity and disk rupture. Bony fractures are revealed by MRI either by signal or morphologic alterations of vertebral bodies, but thin, linear fractures are less well identified than with CT. One of the main advantages of MRI is the direct identification of intrinsic cord pathology such as cord contusion and haemorrhage. Cord haemorrhage seems to be predictive of a complete lesion and of poor outcome. Therefore MRI is proposed to assess the prognosis of traumatic cord lesions, the best time for imaging ranging between 24 and 72 hours after injury.


Spinal Cord ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 366-371
Author(s):  
Tsunehiko Konomi ◽  
Akimasa Yasuda ◽  
Kanehiro Fujiyoshi ◽  
Junichi Yamane ◽  
Shinjiro Kaneko ◽  
...  

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