Nō to shinkei = Brain and nerve
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Spinal epidural abscess (SEA) is a rare condition with potentially devastating consequences and more aggressive diseases than previously recognized. We report a case with cervical epidural abscess treated successfully by emergent neural decompression. A 49-year-old man presented with fever and cervical pain. ⋯ Adequate antibiotics were administered, and the patient showed remarkable improvement of neurological signs and symptoms. He underwent reconstruction surgery 3 weeks after the first operation, and returned to his original job 3 months after the operation. Prompt diagnosis and satisfactory surgical decompression are essential to avoid irreversible neurological sequelae in epidural abscess of the cervical spine.
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Case Reports
[A case of spinal dural arteriovenous fistula draining to the ventral coronal venous plexus].
Here we report a case of spinal dural areteriovenous fistula (AVF) draining to the anterior spinal vein. An 80-year-old female presented with progressive weakness of lower extremities. MRI showed spinal enlargement at the Th10 to L1 with high intensity signals on T2-weighted image and multiple flow voids on the dorsal and ventral surface of the spinal cord. ⋯ In most spinal dural AVF, the venous drainage is predominantly upward on the posterior surface of the spinal cord. The spinal dural AVF draining to the anterior spinal vein is atypical, and cause difficulty in differentiating the anterior spinal artery from the anterior spinal vein. Oblique view angiogram may be helpful to differentiate the anterior spinal vein from anterior spinal artery.