| Literature DB >> 29087811 |
Hidetaka Arishima1, Yoshifumi Higashino1, Shinsuke Yamada1, Ayumi Akazawa1, Hiroshi Arai1, Kenzo Tsunetoshi1, Ken Matsuda1, Toshiaki Kodera1, Ryuhei Kitai1, Kousuke Awara2, Ken-Ichiro Kikuta1.
Abstract
The authors describe a new procedure to detect the tiny dural hole in patients with superficial siderosis (SS) and CSF leakage using a coronary angioscope system for spinal endoscopy and selective CT myelography using a spinal drainage tube. Under fluoroscopy, surgeons inserted the coronary angioscope into the spinal subarachnoid space, similar to the procedure of spinal drainage, and slowly advanced it to the cervical spine. The angioscope clearly showed the small dural hole and injured arachnoid membrane. One week later, the spinal drainage tube was inserted, and the tip of the drainage tube was located just below the level of the dural defect found by the spinal endoscopic examination. This selective CT myelography clarifies the location of the dural defect. During surgery, the small dural hole could be easily located, and it was securely sutured. It is sometimes difficult to detect the actual location of the small dural hole even with thin-slice MRI or dynamic CT myelography in patients with SS. The use of a coronary angioscope for the spinal endoscopy combined with selective CT myelography may provide an effective examination to assess dural closure of the spinal dural defect with SS in cases without obvious dural defects on conventional imaging.Entities:
Keywords: CISS = constructive interference in steady state; COSMIC = coherent oscillatory state acquisition for the manipulation of an image contrast; CT myelography; SAH = subarachnoid hemorrhage; SS = superficial siderosis; coronary angioscope; dural closure; dural defect; spinal endoscopy; superficial siderosis; surgical technique
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29087811 DOI: 10.3171/2017.5.SPINE17233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosurg Spine ISSN: 1547-5646