Journal of spinal disorders
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Case Reports Comparative Study
Neurogenic motor evoked potentials: a prospective comparison of stimulation methods in spinal deformity surgery.
Neurogenic motor evoked potentials (NMEPs) elicited by spinal cord stimulation via the spinous processes (SP-NMEP) have been widely accepted as a sensitive method of monitoring motor tract function. SP-NMEP requires additional surgical dissection as well as electrodes within the wound, making the method somewhat inconvenient. A less invasive percutaneous method of spinal cord stimulation (PERC-NMEP) has more recently been described. ⋯ Although SP-NMEP responses were more readily obtainable than PERC-NMEP, the reliability of the two methods was not significantly different. Both methods were found to be sensitive to neurologic deficit. The present study suggests that when responses are obtained, the percutaneous method is reliable enough to obviate the spinous process method of monitoring the motor function of the spinal cord.
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This study was designed to evaluate the relationship between minor trauma and surgical results of cervical ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament (OPLL), focusing on static compressive and dynamic factors contributing to cord compression plus the type of attendant OPLL. Of the 91 patients treated surgically, 26 had sustained minor trauma (injury group), and the other 65 had no trauma (noninjury group). ⋯ In the continuous type, which had a poor range of motion and severe spinal cord compression, there was no significant difference in the recovery ratio between the injury and noninjury groups. Thus, dynamic factors may play an important role in neurologic deterioration after minor trauma in patients with segmental, mixed, and localized cervical OPLL.
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Pseudomeningocele in the lumbar spine due to spinal fractures or surgical procedures are well-recognized complications. We treated a 24-year-old man who fell from a horse, landing on his buttocks, and developed headaches, back pain, and a large lumbar subcutaneous fluid collection. ⋯ To our knowledge, there have been no cases of traumatic pseudomeningocele related to spina bifida occulta reported in the literature. The authors postulate that congenital defects in the neural arch contribute to the occurrence of this entity, and nonsurgical treatment should be the initial course.