Spinal cord untethering and midline myelotomy for delayed, symptomatic post-traumatic syringomyelia due to retained ballistic fragments: case report

  • Tej D. Azad
  • , Joshua Materi
  • , Brian Y. Hwang
  • , Dimitrios Mathios
  • , Kurt R. Lehner
  • , Landon Hansen
  • , Lydia J. Bernhardt
  • , Yuanxuan Xia
  • , Pavan P. Shah
  • , Nivedha V. Kannapadi
  • , Nicholas Theodore

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Introduction: Post-traumatic syringomyelia is an uncommon complication after traumatic spinal cord injury. This case study details our decision-making and surgical approach for a patient with symptomatic post-traumatic syringomyelia after sustaining a gunshot wound. Case presentation: A 24-year-old man with past medical history of distant American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Grade B spinal cord injury due to ballistic injury developed delayed post-traumatic syringomyelia, resulting in unilateral sensory loss and left upper extremity weakness. CT and MR imaging revealed a syrinx spanning his cervical and thoracic spine causing significant spinal cord compression. To relieve achieve decompression and restore CSF flow dynamics, we performed a bony extradural decompression, bullet fragment extraction, spinal cord untethering, and midline myelotomy. Postoperatively, the patient demonstrated clinical and radiographical improvement. Discussion: Post-traumatic syringomyelia is potentially morbid sequalae of spinal cord injuries. Suspicion for post-traumatic syringomyelia should be maintained in patients with delayed, progressive neurologic deficits. In this setting, surgical intervention may require extradural and intradural procedures to mitigate neural compression along the dilated central canal by the syrinx.

Original languageEnglish
Article number66
JournalSpinal Cord Series and Cases
Volume8
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2022

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Spinal cord untethering and midline myelotomy for delayed, symptomatic post-traumatic syringomyelia due to retained ballistic fragments: case report'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this