Study DesignRetrospective study.PurposeTo obtain information useful in establishing treatment guidelines by evaluating baseline clinical features and treatment outcomes of patients with spinal cord astrocytoma (SCA).Overview of LiteratureThe optimal management of SCA remains controversial, and there are no standard guidelines.MethodsThe study included 20 patients with low-grade and 13 with high-grade SCA surgically treated between 1989 and 2014. Patients were classified according to the extent of surgical resection. Survival was assessed using Kaplan–Meier plots and compared between groups by log-rank tests. Neurological status was defined by the modified McCormick scale and compared between groups by Mann–Whitney U tests.ResultsSurgical resection was performed for 19 of 20 low-grade (95%) and 10 of 13 high-grade (76.9%) SCA patients. Only nine patients (27.3%) underwent gross total resection, all of whom had low-grade SCA. Of all patients, 51.5% showed deteriorated neurological status compared to preoperative baseline. Median overall survival was significantly longer for low-grade SCA than that (91 months, 78% at 5 years vs. 15 months, 31% at 5 years; p=0.007). Low-grade SCA patients benefited from more aggressive resection, whereas high-grade SCA patients did not. Multivariate analysis revealed histology status (hazard ratio [HR], 0.30; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.09–0.98; p<0.05) and postoperative neurological status (HR, 0.12; CI, 0.02–0.95; p<0.05) as independent predictors of longer overall survival. Adjuvant radiotherapy had no significant impact on survival rate. However, a trend for increased survival was observed with radiation cordotomy (RCT) in high-grade SCA patients.ConclusionsAggressive resection for low-grade and RCT may prolong survival. Preservation of neurological status is an important treatment goal. Given the low incidence of SCA, establishing strong collaborative, interdisciplinary, and multi-institutional study groups is necessary to define optimal treatments.
Case report: A patient presented to us with complete C4 tetraplegia after a 3-m fall. MRI performed 120 min after his fall showed spinal canal stenosis due to disk protrusion at the C3/4 level without spinal cord signal changes on T1-and T2-weighted images. He underwent laminoplasty between C2 and C6. Intraoperative ultrasound, performed 6 h after his fall, disclosed a hyperechoic lesion at the C3/4 level of the cervical cord; postoperative T2-weighted MRI, obtained at 8 h after his fall, showed high intensity at the same level. Conclusion: In patients with cerebral infarction, approximately 6 h between the insult and the acquisition of T2-weighted MRI are required to detect signal changes. We postulate that the time course on MRI scans obtained immediately after spinal cord injury is similar in patients with spinal cord injury and cerebral infarction and suggest that the absence of spinal cord abnormalities in the ultra-early post-injury stage is not always predictive of a good prognosis.
Study Design: A retrospective study. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to obtain useful information for establishing the guidelines for treating high-grade spinal cord gliomas. Overview of Literature:The optimal management of high-grade spinal cord gliomas remains controversial. We report the outcomes of the surgical management of 14 high-grade spinal glioma. Methods: We analyzed the outcomes of 14 patients with high-grade spinal cord gliomas who were surgically treated between 1989 and 2012. Survival was charted with the Kaplan-Meier plots and comparisons were made with the log-rank test. Results: None of the patients with high-grade spinal cord gliomas underwent total resection. Subtotal resection was performed in two patients, partial resection was performed in nine patients, and open biopsy was performed in three patients. All patients underwent postoperative radiotherapy and six patients further underwent radiation cordotomy. The median survival time for patients with high-grade spinal cord gliomas was 15 months, with a 5-year survival rate of 22.2%. The median survival time for patients with World Health Organization grade III tumors was 25.5 months, whereas the median survival time for patients with glioblastoma multiforme was 12.5 months. Both univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazards models demonstrated a significant effect only in the group that did not include cervical cord lesion as a factor associated with survival (p=0.04 and 0.03). Conclusions:The surgical outcome of patients diagnosed with high-grade spinal cord gliomas remains poor. Notably, only the model which excluded cervical cord lesions as a factor significantly predicted survival.
Our ceramic spacer is useful in the treatment of elderly patients with lumbar canal stenosis. Treatment comprises an easy surgical procedure and produces no metal artifact on radiological evaluations, such as magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomographic scans.
Although hemorrhagic complications may arise with thrombolytic therapy using recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA), deterioration following administration of rt-PA for hemorrhagic disease is an iatrogenic complication. Caution has recently been raised regarding aortic dissection. A case of cervical epidural hematoma treated with rt-PA is reported herein. The patient was an 87-year-old woman with a history of hemodialysis, brainstem infarction, and stenosis of bilateral internal carotid arteries treated with ticlopidine. She was transferred to our hospital with severe occipital and neck pain. Diffusion-weighted imaging revealed patchy signal hyperintensity in the left cerebellar hemisphere. Right hemiparesis appeared 2 h later, but repeat magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed no new lesions. Administration of rt-PA was performed under a diagnosis of hyper-acute cerebral infarction. Irregular hemodialysis was initiated for pulmonary edema. Complete tetraplegia appeared after hemodialysis, 10 h after rt-PA administration. Repeat MRI revealed cervical epidural hematoma, and hematoma removal was performed. After 10 days, hemiparesis recovered to manual muscle testing (MMT) 2 in the left extremities but remained at MMT0 in the right extremities. Cervical epidural hematoma is a rare complication in stroke practice. Although rt-PA should be administered as soon as possible, since "time is brain," spending a few minutes on spinal MRI is preferable to prevent iatrogenic deterioration. For atypical cases of cerebral infarction, the possibility of cervical epidural hematoma should be considered.
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