Spinal cord injury in forty-four patients with cervical spondylosis
- 1 October 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Spinal Cord
- Vol. 24 (5) , 301-306
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sc.1986.42
Abstract
Within a 12-year period, 44 (9-4%) of 466 patients had spinal cord injury complicating cervical spondylosis. A history of alcoholic use preceding the accident was obtained in 12 (54-5%) of 22 patients whose cord injury was due to a minor fall. The initial myelopathy was complete in 10 patients and incomplete in 34. Although neurological recovery was seen in the majority of the patients with incomplete cord lesion, complete recovery was unusual and most of the patients were partly or completely wheelchair dependent. No patient developed acute neurological deterioration after injury but seven expired. The mortality rate was much higher in the patients whose initial cord lesion was complete (50%> or 5/10) than in those with incomplete myelopathy (5.9% or 2/34). There was no delayed neurological deterioration due to progressive spondylosis of the spine but three patients developed post-traumatic syringomyelia several months to several years after the injury.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cervical spinal cord injury complicating ankylosing spondylitisSpinal Cord, 1985
- POSTTRAUMATIC CERVICAL SYRINGOMYELIABrain, 1985
- Complete Sensorimotor Paralysis after Cord Injury: Mortality, Recovery, and Therapeutic ImplicationsPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1979
- Cervical ankylosis with acute spinal cord injurySpinal Cord, 1977
- Cervical spinal cord injury without bony injurySpinal Cord, 1977
- SPINAL-CORD DAMAGE FROM HYPEREXTENSION INJURY IN CERVICAL SPONDYLOSISThe Lancet, 1963
- The Syndrome of Acute Central Cervical Spinal Cord InjuryJournal of Neurosurgery, 1954
- THE INTERRELATION OF TRAUMA AND CERVICAL SPONDYLOSIS IN COMPRESSION OF THE CERVICAL CORDThe Lancet, 1953