Literature DB >> 9399445

Neurologic outcome of early versus late surgery for cervical spinal cord injury.

A R Vaccaro1, R J Daugherty, T P Sheehan, S J Dante, J M Cotler, R A Balderston, G J Herbison, B E Northrup.   

Abstract

STUDY
DESIGN: A prospective analysis evaluating neurologic outcome after early versus late surgery for cervical spinal cord trauma.
OBJECTIVES: The study was conducted to determine whether neurologic and functional outcome is improved in traumatic cervical spinal cord-injured patients (C3-T1, American Spinal Injury Association grades A-D) who had early surgery (<72 hours after spinal cord injury) compared with those patients who had late surgery (>5 days after spinal cord injury). SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: There is considerable controversy as to the appropriate timing of surgical decompression and stabilization for cervical spinal cord trauma. There have been numerous retrospective studies, but no prospective studies, to determine whether neurologic outcome is best after early versus late surgical treatment for cervical spinal cord injury.
METHODS: Patients meeting appropriate inclusion criteria were randomized to an early (<72 hours after spinal cord injury) or late (>5 days after spinal cord injury) surgical treatment protocol. The neurologic and functional outcomes were recorded from the acute hospital admission to the most recent follow-up.
RESULTS: Comparison of the two groups showed no significant difference in length of acute postoperative intensive care stay, length of inpatient rehabilitation, or improvement in American Spinal Injury Association grade or motor score between early (mean, 1.8 days) versus late (mean, 16.8 days) surgery.
CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study reveal no significant neurologic benefit when cervical spinal cord decompression after trauma is performed less than 72 hours after injury (mean, 1.8 days) as opposed to waiting longer than 5 days (mean, 16.8 days).

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9399445     DOI: 10.1097/00007632-199711150-00006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Spine (Phila Pa 1976)        ISSN: 0362-2436            Impact factor:   3.468


  64 in total

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8.  Expert's comment concerning Grand Rounds case entitled: "Increased intrathecal pressure after traumatic spinal cord injury: an illustrative case presentation and a review of the literature" by Grassner L, Winkler PA, Strowitzki M, et al. (Eur Spine J (2016). doi:10.1007/s00586-016-4769-9) : Surgical treatment of SICS (spinal intradural compartment syndrome)?

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Review 9.  Spinal cord injury-The role of surgical treatment for neurological improvement.

Authors:  N Rath; B Balain
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10.  The efficacy of surgical decompression before 24 hours versus 24 to 72 hours in patients with spinal cord injury from T1 to L1--with specific consideration on ethics: a randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Vafa Rahimi-Movaghar; Soheil Saadat; Alexander R Vaccaro; Seyed Mohammad Ghodsi; Mohammad Samadian; Arya Sheykhmozaffari; Seyed Mohammad Safdari; Bahram Keshmirian
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