Spinal cord syndromes

From IDWiki

Clinical Manifestations

  • Complete transection
    • Loss of all sensory modalities with sensory level
    • Flaccid paraplegia or tetraplegia with sphinct dysfunction
  • Central cord syndrome
    • Weakness in arms > legs
      • LMN in arms, UMN in legs
    • Sacral sparing
    • Suspended (i.e. arms only) sensory loss, sparing vibration and proprioception
    • Differential includes cervical spondylopic myelopathy, central spinal hematoma
    • Confused with carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Brown-Sequard syndrome (hemisection)
    • Loss on contralateral pain/temperature starting 2 segments below lesion
    • Loss of ipsilateral proprioception and weakness
    • Most commonly seen in multiple sclerosis
  • Anterior cord syndrome
    • Loss of pain/temperature below lesion with preserved dorsal column function (proprioception and vibration)
    • Flaccid areflexic paraparesis (anterior horn involvement)
    • Typically from disc herniation in T- or C-spine
  • Cauda equina syndrome
    • Saddle anaesthesia
    • Flaccid paraparesis and loss of sphincter control
  • Subacute combined degeneration of the cord
    • Affects both dorsal column (long tract) and cotricospinal tract
    • Bilateral limb weakness, numbness, and tingling that worsens progressively, with decreased vibration and proprioception
    • Differential includes vitamin B12 deficiency

Etiology

  • Vascular
    • Infarct
    • Hemorrhage
    • Dural AV fistula
  • Infectious
    • Tabes dorsalis (syphilis)
    • HIV
    • HTLV 1&2
    • Abscess
  • Trauma
    • Compressive
    • Hyperextension injury
  • Autoimmune
    • MS
    • Vasculitis
    • Transverse myelitis
  • Metabolic
    • B12 deficiency
    • Copper deficiency
    • AMN
  • Inflammatory/Idiopathic
  • Neoplastic
    • Intrinsic or extrinsic cord compression
  • Psychogenic
  • Congenital
    • SCA
    • HSP
  • Degenerative
    • PLS
    • ALS

Investigations

  • Imaging:
    • MRI of spine based on level of suspected lesion