Abstract

Background: Neuroimaging is indicated in most instances of new-onset myelopathy for clinico-radiological correlation in terms of diagnosis, recovery, and prediction of recurrence. Aim: This study was conducted to study the clinical profile of cases of Compressive Myelopathy and the pattern of spinal cord involvement, also to compare the sites of localisation of clinical diagnosis with MRI diagnosis. Methodology: The present study was a prospective study involving 30 patients. Patients with clinical suspicion of spinal cord disease of age group 20-80 years were included as study participants. The primary pulse sequences included T1 and T2 weighted images on MRI, the location of the lesion, its margins, signal intensity on both T1 and T2 weighted images was noted. Results: The majority of 53.33% of participants were aged between 51 to 60 years. Difficulty in walking was observed in 97% of participants. Men were more often affected than women. Cervical spondylosis was the commonest cause of compressive myelopathy in 57%. A most common pattern of spinal cord involvement was combined Anterior + Posterior cord involvement. The cervical site of localisation (54%) was the commonest followed by the thoracic and lumbar spinal cord. Conclusion: Myelopathies have male preponderance. The commonest cause of compressive myelopathy was Cervical spondylosis. Anterior plus posterior cord syndrome was the commonest pattern seen, followed by posterior cord syndrome, anterior cord syndrome being the least observed. MRI correlates well with a clinical diagnosis and is useful in suggesting the location of the lesion.

Highlights

  • Spinal cord dysfunction is a common neurological problem, which may have an obvious traumatic or compressive cause

  • Clinical Features: Clinical features of spinal cord compression vary depending upon the sources of compression and the tracts involved in the spinal cord

  • Onset varied with the site of involvement and the nature of etiology onset was rapid whenever there is associated factor-like trauma

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Summary

Introduction

Spinal cord dysfunction is a common neurological problem, which may have an obvious traumatic or compressive cause. Myelopathy is usually due to compression of the spinal cord by osteophyte or extruded disc material in the cervical spine. Aim: This study was conducted to study the clinical profile of cases of Compressive Myelopathy and the pattern of spinal cord involvement, to compare the sites of localisation of clinical diagnosis with MRI diagnosis. Patients with clinical suspicion of spinal cord disease of age group 20-80 years were included as study participants. The cervical site of localisation (54%) was the commonest followed by the thoracic and lumbar spinal cord. The commonest cause of compressive myelopathy was Cervical spondylosis. MRI correlates well with a clinical diagnosis and is useful in suggesting the location of the lesion

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