| Literature DB >> 32500255 |
Vicki Marie Butenschoen1, Lisa Hoenikl2, Marcus Deschauer3, Bernhard Meyer2, Jens Gempt2.
Abstract
We present a rare case of a patient initially presenting with unilateral abdominal wall bulging and radicular pain caused by a lateral disc herniation at Th11/12, later suffering from a hernia recurrence with bilateral disc prolapse and motor deficits. The patient underwent sequesterectomy via a right hemilaminectomy at Th11, and after 8 weeks, a bilateral sequesterectomy with semirigid fusion Th11/12 was performed. Unilateral motor deficits at the thoracic level have been discussed in case reports; a bilateral disc protrusion with abdominal wall bulging occurring as a recurrent disc herniation has never been described before.Entities:
Keywords: Disc herniation; Motor deficit; Thoracic spine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32500255 PMCID: PMC8203549 DOI: 10.1007/s00701-020-04431-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurochir (Wien) ISSN: 0001-6268 Impact factor: 2.216
Fig. 1Initial presentation of the patient with abdominal wall bulging right-sided
Fig. 2The abdominal CT scan excludes the suspected diagnosis of an abdominal wall herniation
Fig. 3The MRI scan of the thoracolumbar spine T2 weighted axial and sagittal presents a right-sided disc herniation TH 11/12
Fig. 4In the clinical follow-up 8 weeks after the first operation, the patient presented with bilateral abdominal wall bulging
Fig. 5MRI of the thoracolumbar spine T2 weighted 8 weeks after initial presentation with clinical bilateral thoracic abdominal wall bulging and a bilateral relapse of disc herniation Th11/12
Fig. 6Intraoperative findings: A discectomy (a) and dynamic fusion (b) was performed
Fig. 7Postoperative X-ray in lateral (a) and anterior-posterior imaging (b)