“…As Prabhakar et al previously established, a middle colic artery connecting to the splenic flexure can lead to this event, if anatomically positioned in relation to the possible LP approach we can topographically project a point between this anatomic variant, the spleen and the spinal cord, since the aorta was avoided and the CT scan showed a SMA dissection [2]. Our patient had inadvertently underwent LP at the higher level, which possibly can cause the event; the clinical features that most patients present with SMA dissection are severe abdominal pain associated with nausea, vomiting, abdominal distension and melena [11]. Moreover, other possibility can also be the spontaneous dissection of the SMA [12][13][14][15].…”