Neuro - Spinal Cord Injury Flashcards

1
Q

How is spinal cord injury classified?

A

ASIA classification:
A: Complete - no motor or sensory function in S4-S5
B: Incomplete - no motor function preserved below level of lesion but sensory function intact
C: Incomplete - Some preservation of motor function. More than half of the key muscles have power <3
D: Incomplete - Some preservation of motor function. More than half of the key muscles have a motor function >2.
E: Normal - sensory and motor function normal

Tip: ASIA classification focuses predominantly on motor function. Presence of sensory function only differentiates between A and B.

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2
Q

What spinal cord syndromes are you aware of?

A

Brown-Sequard syndrome: Ipsilateral loss of motor, fine touch and vibration sense. Contralateral loss of temperature and pain.

Anterior spinal cord syndrome: (Anterior spinal artery - supplies anterior 2/3 or cord). Bilateral loss of motor, pain and temperature. Proprioception and vibration intact.

Central cord syndrome: - UMN signs in legs and mixed UMN/LMN signs in arms. - Arms affected > than legs- motor impairment > sensory- Loss of pain and temperature in upper limbs- proximal sparing

Complete transection of the cord: Loss of all motor and sensory level below the lesion.

Cauda equina: Perineal sensory impairment with loss of anal sphincter tone and bladder function. Asymmetric motor and sensory deficit. Knee and ankle jerks may be absent.

Conus medullaris: Absent ankle, present knee reflexes. Areflexic bladder, faecal incontinence.

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3
Q

What is neurogenic shock?

A
  • loss of vascular tone and associated hypotension (distributive shock)below the level of the lesion.- bradycardia- hypothermia- results from loss of autonomic pathways (particularly cardiac sympathetic nerves (T2-T5)).
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4
Q

What is spinal shock?

A
  • loss of reflexes below the level of the lesion leading to flaccid areflexia.
  • can take 3-6 weeks to recover
  • spasticity and autonomic dysreflexia are common
  • 50-80% of patients with lesions above T7 develop autonomic dysreflexia.
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5
Q

What is autonomic dysreflexia

A
  • in spinal injury patients (usually T6 and above):
  • in response to stimulus below the level of the lesion the afferent stimulus (often pain, bladder, bowel) triggers a mass, sustained spinal sympathetic reflex below the lesion which isn’t moderated by central negative feedback.
  • clinically this presents as profound hypertension with vagal mediated reflex bradycardia, headaches, sweating, flushing above the lesion. Pale and cold (vasoconstricted) below the lesion.
  • may lead to seizures, stroke or cardiac arrest.Management should in the first instance be preventative.Management of hypertension can include PRN vasodilators or antihypertensives.
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6
Q

What are the principles of initial management after acute spinal injury? What specific considerations need to be given to airway, breathing and circulation?

A

Initial management should follow an ABCDE approach.
Airway:
- low threshold for airway and ventilatory support, especially in cervical injuries.
- C5 and above likely to need intubation and ventilation
- intubation may be complicated by need for RSI and MILS
- avoid suxamethonium after 72 hrs

Breathing:
- May have additional thoracic or pulmonary injury.
- If LOC, may have aspirated.
- Likely to have impaired ventilation in cervical injuries and need urgent ventilatory support.
- may be easier to ventilate in supine position.

C:
- may have neurogenic shock and be cardiovascular unstable on induction
- CVS stability may be made worse by associated trauma/haemorrhage.
- have vasopressors to hand

Other considerations:
- VTE prophylaxis
- stress ulcer prophylaxis
- VAP bundles
- pressure areas
- avoidance of hypoxia, hypotension, and hypercarbia are crucial in the days after injury
- Imaging
- Neurosurgical discussion

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7
Q

What factors determine prognosis after spinal cord injury?

A
  1. Level of injury
    2.Ageof patient
  2. Injury severity
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