Stab wound injuries to the spinal cord are rare, although they commonly cause complete or incomplete neurological deficits. Normal neurological examination with a knife traversing the spinal canal is extremely rare. Here we report on a patient with a knife lodged in the thoracic spine with normal neurological examination and describe direct withdrawal of the knife with excellent results that have not been reported to date. A 50-year-old male patient was admitted to the emergency service because of his sustaining a stab wound to thoracic 3-4 level due to a knife traversing the spinal canal and still lodged in the vertebral bodies. His neurological examination was normal. The knife was withdrawn in the operating room under general anesthesia without bleeding or cerebrospinal fluid leakage. After withdrawal neurological examination was normal and control magnetic resonance imaging showed no abnormalities. Surgical exploration is suggested for spinal stab wounds if there is a retained body. Some authors recommend exploration even no foreign body is detected. Incomplete or complete cord injuries deserve surgical exploration, but in a patient with normal neurological examination direct withdrawal can be a safe option. Exploration of the wound surgically may have risks associated with enlarging the incision, muscle dissection, enlarging dural tear and bony removal, which may have long-term adverse effects. The operation team must be ready for urgent exploration. Cerebrospinal fluid leakage, excessive bleeding or any neurological deficit after removal must mandate surgical exploration. Long-term close follow-up of the patient has paramount importance for late complications such as infection and pseudomeningocele development.
Spinal stabilization with fusion is the widely used method for traumatic or pathologic fracture of spine, spinal stenosis, and spondylolisthesis. Complications may emerge during or after the operations. Infection, hematoma and neurological deficits are early noticed findings. Screw and/or rod fractures present in long-term after surgery. Rod migration in out of the spinal column is a rare entity. A 67-year-old woman was visited our clinic for right leg pain. She had a previous spinal instrumentation surgery for spondylolisthesis in another center 6 years before. After radiological work-up, a distally migrated rod piece was observed in the retroperitoneal portion. The patient was operated for degenerative change; old instruments were replaced and extended to the L2 level with posterior spinal fusion. After the operation, her right leg pain improved. The asymptomatic migrated rod piece has regularly been followed clinically and radiologically, since then. Although it has rarely been reported, migration of the instrumentation material should be kept in mind. Spinal fixation without fusion makes the mechanical system vulnerable to motion effects of spine, especially in a degenerative and osteoporotic background. Long-term, even life-long follow-up is necessary for late term complications.
The aim of the study was to analyze whether the measurement of changes in the anatomical position and volume of middle concha, the volume changes in the area between the middle concha and lamina papyracea, the evaluation of opacification in major paranasal sinuses, and osteomeatal complex occlusion in cases with middle concha by out-fracture technique during endoscopic endonasal transsphenoidal approach is a minimally invasive surgery, and also to find out whether these changes lead to the development of tendency to rhinosinusitis. It was a retrospective clinical study. Forty-five cases, between 2013 and 2015, planned for endoscopic endonasal transsphenoidal surgery due to hypophyseal pathology at the Neurosurgery Departments of Marmara University Hospital were evaluated retrospectively. The patients were evaluated for the changes in the anatomy of the middle concha and the effects of these changes to paranasal sinuses by paranasal computed tomographies were studied at the preoperative second week and postoperative 12 month. The Lund-Mackay scoring system was used for the evaluation of opacification in the five major paranasal sinuses and occlusion of the osteomeatal complex in the pre- and postoperative period. The Lund-Mackay scoring system was used to analyze the paranasal computed tomography of the patients at the preoperative 2 weeks and postoperative first year. According to the Lund-Mackay scoring system, no significant difference was detected between the preoperative and postoperative opacification of paranasal sinuses (p > 0.05). Besides, there was also no significant difference between the preoperative and postoperative osteomeatal complex occlusion (p > 0.05). Considering the distance between middle concha and lamina papyracea following the out-fracture of the middle concha, a significant lateralization of 0.5 mm between the preoperative and postoperative period was observed (p < 0.05). In addition, a significant change was also detected in the volume of middle concha (p < 0.05). The volume of the area between the middle concha and lamina papyracea was decreased with a statistical significance (p < 0.05). The endoscopic endonasal transsphenoidal surgery causes some variations in the structures of the middle concha, paranasal sinuses, and OMC, but these changes do not lead to significant rhinologic pathologies.
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