Abstract
Introduction. Cervical spinal cord injuries due to traumatic fractures are associated with persistent neurological deficits. Although clinical evidence is weak, early decompression, defined as <24–72 h, has been frequently proposed. Animal studies show better outcomes after early decompression within one hour or less, which can hardly ever be achieved in clinical practice. Case Presentation. A 37-year-old patient was hospitalized after being hit by a shying horse. After diagnosis of C4/5 fracture dislocation and complete paraplegia, she was intubated and sedated with deep relaxation. Emergency reduction was performed at approximately 120 minutes after trauma. Subsequently, a standard anterior decompression, discectomy, and fusion were carried out. She was then transferred to a specialized rehabilitation hospital. Her neurologic function improved from AIS grade A on admission to grade B postoperatively and grade D after four months of rehabilitation. One year after the accident, she was ambulatory without walking aids and restarted horse riding. Discussion and Conclusion. Rarely in clinical practice, decompression of the spine canal can be performed as early as in this case. This case highlights the potential benefit of utmost early reduction in cervical fracture dislocations with compression of the spinal cord.
Highlights
Cervical spinal cord injuries due to traumatic fractures are associated with persistent neurological deficits
Animal studies show better outcomes after early decompression within one hour or less, which can hardly ever be achieved in clinical practice
Spinal cord injuries due to traumatic fractures of the cervical spine can be associated with persistent neurological deficits
Summary
Spinal cord injuries due to traumatic fractures of the cervical spine can be associated with persistent neurological deficits. In AIS grade B patients, McCarthy et al found a higher rate of improvement of at least one grade when decompression was performed in less than eight hours after injury [6]. Yisheng et al reported on a series of 290 patients suffering from cervical spinal cord injuries with fracture and dislocation. They concluded that first aid measures of early closed reduction or realignment and immobilization of the cervical spine, breathing support, and high-dose methylprednisolone were the most important in the treatment for traumatic spinal cord injury. Though, found that 24 out of 336 patients with AIS grade A improved to grade D at one-year followup [8]
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