2.Subacute posttraumatic ascending myelopathy: A case report and review of literature.
Mukul MOHINDRA ; V-K GAUTAM ; Lalit MAINI ; Santosh KUMAR ; Saurabh VERMA
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2015;18(1):48-50
Subacute posttraumatic ascending myelopathy is a rare disorder, unrelated to syrinx formation or mechanical instability, which may gradually emerge within the first 1-2 weeks after a spinal cord injury and may lead to diagnostic and prognostic dilemmas. We present a case of 24-year-old female with unstable wedge compression fracture of L1 vertebrae with signal changes in the upper lumbar cord causing complete paraplegia below D9 with bladder and bowel involvement. In the subsequent week, she developed a delayed progressively increasing neurological deficit with cord signal abnormality on MRI extending cephalad from the injury site to the upper dorsal cord. The patient had no initial clinical improvement initially but showed a delayed recovery over months.
Adult
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Spinal Cord Diseases
;
etiology
;
therapy
;
Spinal Cord Injuries
;
complications
;
Spinal Fractures
;
complications
3.Mechanisms of mid-thoracic spine fracture/dislocation due to falls during horse racing: A report of two cases.
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2021;24(6):397-400
We reported two cases of jockeys who sustained fracture/dislocation of the mid-thoracic spine due to traumatic falls during horse racing. We examined the injury mechanism based upon the patients' diagnostic images and video footage of races, in which the accidents occurred. Admission imaging of patient 1 (a 42 years old male) revealed T5 burst fracture with bony retropulsion of 7 mm causing complete paralysis below T5/6. There existed 22° focal kyphosis at T5/6, anterolisthesis of T5 relative to T6, T5/6 disc herniation, cord edema and epidural hemorrhage from T4 through T6, and cord injury from C3 through C6. Admission imaging of patient 2 (a 23 years old male) revealed T4/5 fracture/dislocation causing incomplete paralysis below spinal level. There existed compression fractures at T5, T6, and T7; 4 mm anterior subluxation of T4 on T5; diffuse cord swelling from T3 through T5; comminuted fracture of the C1 right lateral mass; right frontal traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage; and extensive diffuse axonal injury. The injuries were caused by high energy flexion-compression of the mid-thoracic spine with a flexed posture upon impact. Our results suggest that substantially greater cord compression occurred transiently during trauma as compared to that documented from admission imaging. Video footage of the accidents indicated that the spine buckled and failed due to abrupt pocketing and deceleration of the head, neck and shoulders upon impact with the ground combined with continued forward and downward momentum of the torso and lower extremities. While a similar mechanism is well known to cause fracture/dislocation of the cervical spine, it is less common and less understood for mid-thoracic spine injuries. Our study provides insight into the etiology of fracture/dislocation patterns of the mid-thoracic spine due to falls during horse racing.
Accidental Falls
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Animals
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Horses
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Humans
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Joint Dislocations
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Male
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Spinal Cord Injuries/etiology*
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Spinal Fractures/etiology*
;
Spinal Injuries
;
Thoracic Vertebrae/injuries*
4.Progress on the role of autophagy in spinal cord injury.
Kai-liang ZHOU ; Xiao-lei ZHANG ; Kai WU ; Yong-li WANG ; Hua-zi XU
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2015;28(8):695-698
In recent years, the study of autophagy in spinal cord injury (SCI) gradually becomes the hot spot. However, the function of autophagy in the injured spinal cord is still controversial. In order to further understand the role of autophagy after SCI, we summarized the activation of autophagy, autophagic cell death, the relationship between autophagy and apoptosis, the function of autophagy in promoting the molecular metabolism and the role of autophagy after spinal cord injury. We concluded that the role of autophagy after SCI is a double-edged sword. Upregulating the level of autophagy appropriately can promote damaged proteins metabolism and inhibit apoptosis. However, excessive activation of antophagy may induce autophagic cell dealth. So we consider that the proper regulation of autophagy will be a new target in the treatment of SCI.
Animals
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Apoptosis
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Autophagy
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physiology
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Humans
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Spinal Cord Injuries
;
etiology
;
pathology
6.Spinal cord injury in Parkour sport (free running): a rare case report.
Nima DERAKHSHAN ; Mohammad Reza ZAREI ; Zahed MALEKMOHAMMADY ; Vafa RAHIMI-MOVAGHAR
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2014;17(3):178-179
A 24-year-old male was transferred to the emergency department while being in the state of quadriplegia with a history of performing Parkour sport, which is also called double front flip. Neurological examination revealed that the patient's muscle power was 0/5 at all extremities. The patient did not show any sense of light touch or pain in his extremities. In radiological studies, cervical spine X-ray and CT scan images showed C4-C5 subluxation with bilateral locked facets and spinal cord injury. The results of this very rare case study revealed that exercising Parkour sport without taking into account safety standards could result in irreversible injuries to the cervical spinal cord with fatal outcome.
Cervical Vertebrae
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Humans
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Male
;
Radiography
;
Running
;
injuries
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Spinal Cord Injuries
;
diagnostic imaging
;
etiology
;
Young Adult
7.Spinal Cord Stimulation for Pain Treatment After Spinal Cord Injury.
Qian HUANG ; Wanru DUAN ; Eellan SIVANESAN ; Shuguang LIU ; Fei YANG ; Zhiyong CHEN ; Neil C FORD ; Xueming CHEN ; Yun GUAN
Neuroscience Bulletin 2019;35(3):527-539
In addition to restoration of bladder, bowel, and motor functions, alleviating the accompanying debilitating pain is equally important for improving the quality of life of patients with spinal cord injury (SCI). Currently, however, the treatment of chronic pain after SCI remains a largely unmet need. Electrical spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has been used to manage a variety of chronic pain conditions that are refractory to pharmacotherapy. Yet, its efficacy, benefit profiles, and mechanisms of action in SCI pain remain elusive, due to limited research, methodological weaknesses in previous clinical studies, and a lack of mechanistic exploration of SCS for SCI pain control. We aim to review recent studies and outline the therapeutic potential of different SCS paradigms for traumatic SCI pain. We begin with an overview of its manifestations, classification, potential underlying etiology, and current challenges for its treatment. The clinical evidence for using SCS in SCI pain is then reviewed. Finally, future perspectives of pre-clinical research and clinical study of SCS for SCI pain treatment are discussed.
Animals
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Chronic Pain
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Humans
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Pain
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etiology
;
Pain Management
;
methods
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Quality of Life
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Spinal Cord Injuries
;
complications
;
Spinal Cord Stimulation
;
Treatment Outcome
8.Effect of wheelchair ergometer training on spinal cord-injured paraplegics.
Shin Young YIM ; Kyung Ja CHO ; Chang Il PARK ; Tae Sik YOON ; Dae Yong HAN ; Se Kyu KIM ; Hong Lyeol LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 1993;34(3):278-286
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of wheelchair ergometer training on spinal cord-injured paraplegics. Eleven male paraplegics with a mean age of 30.9 years (range, 20 to 49 years) participated in the wheelchair ergometer training for the period of 5 weeks. The mean peak heart rate, the mean peak systolic blood pressure and the mean time required for 100m wheelchair propelling at resistance level 1 were significantly decreased at the end of 5 weeks of training as compared with those at pre-training. There was no statistically significant difference in pulmonary function test at pre- and post-training. The peak torque of shoulder flexor and the total work of shoulder flexor and extensor at 180 degrees/sec after training were increased more significantly than those prior to the training. In accordance with the findings as revealed above, it is deemed that the endurance and strength of the upper body and the cardiac fitness for spinal cord-injured paraplegics may be improved by the wheelchair ergometer exercise
Adult
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*Exercise Therapy
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Human
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Male
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Middle Age
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Paraplegia/etiology/*rehabilitation
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Spinal Cord Injuries/complications/*rehabilitation
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*Wheelchairs
10.Spinal cord injury and male infertility.
Manoj MONGA ; Zachary GORDON ; Mahadevan RAJASEKARAN
National Journal of Andrology 2002;8(4):235-240
Spinal cord injury (SCI) commonly affects males in their reproductive years. After spinal cord injury, most men experience fertility related problems including erectile and ejaculatory dysfunction, impaired spermatogenesis, abnormal sperm viability, motility, and morphology, genitourinary infection and endocrine abnormalities. In this article we will review the pathophysiology, evaluation and management of infertility in spinal cord injury. The impact of spinal cord injury on seminal plasma and the contribution of seminal oxidative stress to the poor sperm quality of men with spinal cord injury will be presented. Success with sperm retrieval techniques and assisted reproductive technology in SCI men with spinal cord injury will be discussed.
Ejaculation
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Humans
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Infertility, Male
;
etiology
;
Male
;
Reproductive Techniques
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Semen
;
Spinal Cord Injuries
;
complications
;
physiopathology
;
Testis
;
physiopathology