Journal of neurology
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Journal of neurology · Jul 1997
Comparative Study Clinical TrialPlasticity of the spinal cord contributes to neurological improvement after treatment by cervical decompression. A magnetic resonance imaging study.
To investigate the relationship between morphological plasticity of the spinal cord and neurological outcome after surgery for compressive lesions, we correlated the transverse area of the cervical spinal cord measured by transaxial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) obtained during the early postoperative period (1-6 months) with neurological function assessed at a median postoperative follow-up period of 2.5 years. Measurements on MRI in 56 patients (35 men and 21 women) included evaluation of the cross-sectional area of the cervical cord and the subarachnoidal space at the level of decompression. ⋯ Expansion of the cervical cord during the early postoperative period correlated significantly with the late postoperative neurological status (P = 0.009). Our results suggest that an increase in the cross-sectional area of the cervical spinal cord, representing spinal cord morphological plasticity, is a significant factor in determining the late neurological improvement following decompressive surgery.
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Seven patients are reported with meningitis due to viridans streptococci. These patients represented 5% of culture-proven cases of bacterial meningitis in adults participating in a prospective multicentre clinical trial evaluating the use of dexamethasone. Meningitis was iatrogenic in three patients: one patient had been treated with endoscopic sclerotherapy for oesophageal varices, and two patients had undergone thermocoagulation of the gasserian ganglion for trigeminal neuralgia in the previous days.