• Eur J Emerg Med · Feb 2012

    Case Reports

    Spinal epidural hematoma: not always an obvious diagnosis.

    • Julie Dubourg, Sylma Diabira, Thomas Robert, and Abderrahmane Hamlat.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Hôpital Neurologique Pierre Wertheimer, University Claude Bernard, Lyon, France.
    • Eur J Emerg Med. 2012 Feb 1;19(1):2-8.

    AbstractSpinal epidural hematoma (SEH) is a rare neurosurgical emergency. SEH is characterized by an archetypal clinical presentation including abrupt spinal pain followed more or less rapidly by various degrees of neurological deficit. The diagnosis of SEH, often based on a clinical presumption, represents a clinical challenge. Several reports have outlined missed or delayed diagnosis due to unusual and confusing onsets or unawareness of this diagnosis by physicians. Therefore, physicians should keep in mind the possibility of SEH in their differential diagnosis when confronted with patients complaining of sudden onset of acute spinal pain with or without neurological sign, because the impact of a delayed diagnosis can be disabling catastrophic neurological sequelae. We suggest that SEH is a dynamic disease, which occurs in patients with an abnormal vasculature structural degenerative change. The bleeding is probably of multifactorial origin incriminating veins as well as arteries. Therefore, we proposed a classification of SEH, according to the most probable etiology whatever the associated factors, in six groups: spontaneous, secondary, iatrogenic, traumatic, recurrent, and idiopathic SEH.

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