• Pediatric neurology · Jul 2010

    Case Reports

    Brown-Séquard-plus syndrome because of penetrating trauma in children.

    • Magimairajan Issaivanan, Ndina M Nhlane, Firdous Rizvi, Mayank Shukla, and Mary C Baldauf.
    • Department of Pediatrics, Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA.
    • Pediatr. Neurol. 2010 Jul 1;43(1):57-60.

    AbstractBrown-Séquard syndrome is an uncommon condition involving incomplete spinal cord injury, with ipsilateral motor and proprioception loss, contralateral pain, and decreased temperature. Brown-Séquard-plus syndrome is associated with additional neurologic findings involving the eyes, bowel, or bladder. We describe an adolescent with Brown-Séquard-plus syndrome attributable to a stab injury. Our patient's clinical features of spinal and neurogenic shock overlapped at presentation. He was managed with high-dose steroids, along with intense physiotherapy and rehabilitation, resulting in good neurologic recovery. Appropriate medical (and surgical, when indicated) management usually results in good to complete recovery of neurologic function, depending on the level and grade of injury. With the increasing incidence of gunshot wounds and stab injuries in children, pediatricians, including pediatric neurologists and emergency physicians, are more likely to encounter these types of spinal cord injuries in children.

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