| Literature DB >> 28164124 |
Fei Yang1, Jianning Zhao1, Haidong Xu1.
Abstract
Hemorrhagic stroke can occur after spine and joint surgeries such as laminectomy, lumbar spinal fusion, tumor resection, and total joint arthroplasty. Although this kind of stroke rarely happens, it may cause severe consequences and high mortality rates. Typical clinical symptoms of hemorrhagic stroke after spine and joint surgeries include headache, vomiting, consciousness disturbance, and mental disorders. It can happen several hours after surgeries. Most bleeding sites are located in cerebellar hemisphere and temporal lobe. A cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage caused by surgeries may be the key to intracranial hemorrhages happening. Early diagnosis and treatments are very important for patients to prevent the further progression of intracranial hemorrhages. Several patients need a hematoma evacuation and their prognosis is not optimistic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28164124 PMCID: PMC5259668 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5390839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Clinical status of hemorrhagic stroke after different types of spine surgeries.
| Surgery types | Clinical manifestations | CT appearance | Brain parenchyma hemorrhage location | Treatments | Results | Total case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cervical laminectomy | 10 cases have a serious headache, 1 case has aphasia, and 2 cases have limb motor dysfunction | 3 cases show subarachnoid hemorrhage, and 8 cases show brain parenchyma hemorrhage | 4 cases locate unilateral cerebellar hemisphere, 3 cases locate unilateral temporal lobe, and 1 case locates bilateral cerebellar hemisphere | 8 cases under conservative treatments, 2 cases under dural tear repairing, and 1 case under decompressive craniectomy | 9 cases completely recover with no neurologic defect, 1 case recovers with lower limbs spasticity, and 1 case died | 11 |
| Lumbar laminectomy | 17 cases have headache and nausea, 6 cases have consciousness disturbance, 3 cases have limb motor dysfunction, and 1 has gait ataxia | 4 cases show subarachnoid hemorrhage, 12 cases show brain parenchyma hemorrhage, and 1 case shows both of them | 8 cases locate unilateral cerebellar hemisphere, 2 cases locate cerebellar vermis, 1 case locates right temporal lobe, and 1 case locates parietooccipital lobes | 11 cases under conservative treatments, 4 cases under dural tear repairing, 2 cases under hemorrhage evacuation, and 2 cases under decompressive craniectomy | 15 cases completely recover with no neurologic defect, 2 cases died, 1 case has left foot drop and diplopia, and 1 case has cognitive deficit | 19 |
| Lumbar spinal fusion | All cases have headache and nausea, 2 cases have dysarthria, 1 case has a speech deficit, and 1 case has consciousness disturbance | 1 case shows subarachnoid hemorrhage, and 7 cases show brain parenchyma hemorrhage, and 2 cases show both of them | 6 cases locate unilateral cerebellar hemisphere, 1 case locates bilateral cerebellar hemisphere, and 2 cases locate unilateral occipital lobe | 7 cases under conservative treatments, 2 cases under dural tear repairing, and 1 case under hematoma evacuation | 8 cases completely recover with no neurologic defect, 1 case has speech deficit, and 1 case died | 10 |
| Tumor resection | All cases have headache, and 1 has dizziness and vomiting | 2 cases show cerebellar hemorrhage, and 1 case shows cerebral hemisphere hemorrhage | 2 cases locate unilateral cerebellar hemisphere, and 1 case locates left temporooccipital cortex | All cases under conservative treatments | 2 cases completely recover, and 1 case has a slight ataxia | 3 |
| Harington rod placement | Headache and vomiting | Subarachnoid hemorrhage and cerebellum hemorrhage | Right cerebellar hemispheres, right ventricle, and subarachnoid spaces | Suboccipital craniotomy | Completely recovered | 1 |