• Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Mar 2007

    Case Reports

    The complications of scar formation associated with intrathecal pump placement.

    • Marina G Protopapas, Elizabeth Bundock, Susan Westmoreland, Christopher Nero, W Andrew Graham, and Shanker Nesathurai.
    • Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
    • Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2007 Mar 1;88(3):389-90.

    AbstractA 40-year-old man had an intrathecal morphine-baclofen pump inserted for the treatment of severe dystonia affecting all limbs and severe low back pain. The etiology of his dystonic symptoms, despite thorough investigations, was uncertain. At age 45, the patient fell resulting in a cervical spinal cord injury. He underwent C2 through C5 instrumentation and fusion for cervical spine stabilization. Subsequently, an intrathecal morphine-baclofen pump was implanted to control pain and decrease spasticity. The patient ultimately died at age 48 from complications of pneumonia, and an autopsy was performed. Gross pathologic examination revealed that the intrathecal catheter entered the posterior aspect of the lumbar thecal sac, but coursed superiorly in the anterior intradural space. The catheter tip exited the thecal sac in the upper thoracic spine and became embedded in a fibrotic scar. Displacement of the catheter tip of the intrathecal morphine-baclofen pump and subsequent formation of scar tissue resulted in decreased drug delivery, contributing to diminished pain control and functional status. Catheter displacement and epidural scar formation must be considered as a potential cause of ineffective pain control and decreased functional status in patients with intrathecal morphine-baclofen pumps.

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