Spinal Cord Diseases: Traumatic, Vascular, and Neoplastic Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What’s the main cause of injury for trauma, vascular and neoplastic spinal disorder?

A
  • Vascular compromise
  • progressive damage over the the next 3-7 days
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2
Q

How does vascular compromise lead to spinal cord disorder?

A

Lack of blood flow = lack of oxygen and glucose
- depolarization of neurons and axons
- leads to build up to Ca2+
- activation of autodestructive enzymes: calpains, caspase, and xanthine oxidase

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3
Q

Are vascular spinal diseases painful?

A

When it happens, yes. If there is a delay to the vet, the pain may not be present anymore

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4
Q

How does patient with vascular spinal injury present?

A
  • dysfunction is highly lateralized
  • NOT painful
  • will need MRI to confirm
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5
Q

What is the prognosis for recovery for patients with vascular spinal injury?

A
  • good if it doesn’t involve the LMN (ie., not at C6-T2, L4 -S3)
  • also depends on the severity of the injury
  • if extremely severe, patient usually can’t survive
  • If LMN region affected, may need prolonged recovery or failure to recover
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6
Q

Describe fibrocartilaginous embolism (FCE).

A
  • occlusion of the spinal artery by chondroid material –> like a “stroke”
  • so downstream spinal cord become devitalized and necrotic within hours –> mild worsening of clinical signs
  • classic FCE = small, localized
  • may resolve spontaneously (considerable improvement noted in 48h); up to 3m for full recovery
  • lesion in C1-C5 or T4-L3 = good prognosis
  • sacral involvement = troublesome due to fecal/ urinary incontinence
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7
Q

What other vascular spinal cord injuries are possible?

A
  • Blood vessel rupture/ hematomyelia: if large, require immediate surgical decompression
  • extradural hematoma
  • vascular anomalies
  • systemic disease that leads to hypocoagulable state: hemophilia, von Willebrand’s, vasculitis
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8
Q

Where is the most common location for spinal tumours?

A

extradural > intradural/extramedullary > intramedullary

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9
Q

What type of spinal cancer is commonly found in the extradural location?

A

OSA, HSA, STS, LSA, MM etc
- very painful

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10
Q

What type of spinal cancer is commonly found in the intradural/ extramedullary location?

A
  • in subarachnoid space
  • meningioma (esp C1-C2; Boxer), nerve sheath tumours (esp @ intumescences)
  • tend to be slow growing
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11
Q

What type of spinal cancer is commonly found in the intramedullary location?

A
  • rare
  • glial cells or neurons
  • astrocytoma and ependymoma
  • can be well encapsulated or highly invasive
  • nephroblastoma
  • slowly progressive
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