Surfer's Myelopathy
Autor: | Jason M. Cage, David G. Malone, Brett A. Freedman, Edward C. Benzel, Peter A. Rasmussen |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Poison control Spinal disease Spinal Cord Diseases Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences Myelopathy 0302 clinical medicine medicine.artery Back pain Humans Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Spinal cord injury Spinal Cord Injuries business.industry Middle Aged medicine.disease Surgery Conus medullaris Surfer's myelopathy medicine.anatomical_structure Infarction Athletic Injuries Female Steroids Neurology (clinical) Artery of Adamkiewicz medicine.symptom business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Neurosurgery. 78:602-611 |
ISSN: | 0148-396X |
DOI: | 10.1227/neu.0000000000001089 |
Popis: | BACKGROUND: Surfer's myelopathy is a rare, acute, atraumatic myelopathy that occurs in novice surfers. OBJECTIVE: To review the literature and to present an illustrative case. METHODS: Medical literature was queried for all reports of this condition, systematically abstracted, and analyzed. An illustrative case that provides the most definitive support for a vascular cause is presented. Treatment considerations based on prior cases and expert opinions are provided. RESULTS: Sixty-four cases of surfer's myelopathy have been reported to date. This atraumatic thoracic/conus medullaris myelopathy with only a 42% neurological recovery rate almost uniformly affects young, healthy, novice surfers who have no pre-existent spinal disease. Symptoms usually start with back pain and rapidly progress to complete or incomplete myelopathy. T2 magnetic resonance images show increased signal in the central spinal cord within 24 to 72 hours. Gadolinium enhancement and diffusion-weighted imaging are not helpful. Angiography has been underused. Angiogram in our case showed the absence of a right T12 radicular artery and no artery of Adamkiewicz, which, along with clinical findings, support the vascular origin theory. Incomplete cases often improve within 24 hours of onset, whereas no improvement has been reported for American Spinal Injury Association class A cases. Several acute interventions have been tried. Steroids are most common, and patients receiving steroids improved 55% of the time with no reported adverse effects. CONCLUSION: Surfer's myelopathy is a clinical entity associated with complete deficit in >50% of cases. Its prognosis is almost exclusively dictated by severity at presentation/nadir. Thus, publicizing this rare but serious condition (within and outside the medical literature) may be an effective intervention. ABBREVIATIONS: ASIA, American Spinal Injury AssociationNASCIS, National Acute Spinal Cord Injury StudiesSCI, spinal cord injurytPA, tissue-type plasminogen activator. Language: en |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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