| Literature DB >> 32246622 |
Dionne Telemacque1, Feng-Zhao Zhu1, Zheng-Wei Ren1, Kai-Fang Chen1, Deepak Drepaul1, Sheng Yao1, Fan Yang1, Yan-Zheng Qu1, Ting-Fang Sun1, Xiao-Dong Guo1.
Abstract
Current management for spinal cord injury aims to reduce secondary damage and recover sensation and movement. Acute spinal cord injury is often accompanied by spinal cord compartment syndrome. Decompression by durotomy and/or myelotomy attempts to relieve secondary damage by completelyrelieving the compression of the spinal cord, removing the necrotic tissue, decreasing edema, reducing hemorrhage, and improving blood circulation in the spinal cord. However, it is controversial whether durotomy and/or myelotomy after spinal cord injury are beneficial to neurological recovery. This review compares the clinical effects of durotomy with those of myelotomy in the treatment of spinal cord injury. We found that durotomy has been performed more than myelotomy in the clinic, and that durotomy may be safer and more effective than myelotomy. Durotomy performed in humans had positive effects on neurological function in 92.3% of studies in this review, while durotomy in animals had positive effects on neurological function in 83.3% of studies. Myelotomy procedures were effective in 80% of animal studies, but only one clinical study of myelotomy has reported positive results, of motor and sensory improvement, in humans. However, a number of new animal studies have reported that durotomy and myelotomy are ineffective for spinal cord injury. More clinical data, in the form of a randomized controlled study, are needed to understand the effectiveness of durotomy and myelotomy.Entities:
Keywords: decompression; durotomy; intraspinal pressure; laminectomy; myelotomy; neurological recovery; spinal cord compartment syndrome; spinal cord injury; spinal cord interstitial pressure
Year: 2020 PMID: 32246622 DOI: 10.4103/1673-5374.280304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Regen Res ISSN: 1673-5374 Impact factor: 5.135