| Literature DB >> 26512277 |
Hyun-Ho Lee1, Sung-Choon Park1, Young Kim1, Young-Soo Ha1.
Abstract
Spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma is an uncommon but disabling disease. This paper reports a case of spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma and treatment by surgical management. A 32-year-old male presented with a 30-minute history of sudden headache, back pain, chest pain, and progressive quadriplegia. Whole-spinal sagittal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed spinal epidural hematoma on the ventral portion of the spinal canal. Total laminectomy from T5 to T7 was performed, and hematoma located at the ventral portion of the spinal cord was evacuated. Epidural drainages were inserted in the upper and lower epidural spaces. The patient improved sufficiently to ambulate, and paresthesia was fully recovered. Spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma should be considered when patients present symptoms of spinal cord compression after sudden back pain or chest pain. To prevent permanent neurologic deficits, early and correct diagnosis with timely surgical management is necessary.Entities:
Keywords: Functional recovery; Quadriplegia; Spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma; Surgical treatment
Year: 2015 PMID: 26512277 PMCID: PMC4623177 DOI: 10.14245/kjs.2015.12.3.173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Spine ISSN: 1738-2262
Fig. 1(A, B, C, and D) Preoperative whole spine MR imaging shows epidural hematoma (T1: iso signal intensity, T2: high signal intensity) on the ventral portion of entire spinal canal. The hematoma compressed spinal cord.
Fig. 2Total laminectomy from T5 to T7 and evacuation of epidural hematoma was done. The epidural drain was inserted on the upper and lower epidural space.
Fig. 3(A, B, and C) Postoperative whole spine MR imaging shows mar ked evacuation of the hematoma and relieved spinal cord compression.