We have studied 29 patients for at least five years after canal-expansive laminoplasty for cervical spondylotic myelopathy. The short- and long-term clinical results were compared, and successive radiographs assessed. The long-term clinical outcome was excellent in five patients, good in 12, fair in 11 and poor in one. The mean short- and long-term improvements were 54.4% and 48.5% but patients with focal kyphotic, kyphotic and S-shaped cervical spines did less well, as did those who had a decrease in the index of curvature of the cervical spine of more than 10 at follow-up. Canal-expansive laminoplasty with reconstitution of the posterior soft tissues may help to prevent postoperative malalignment and late neurological deterioration.
was carried out by a statistical method of the nationwide epidemiological study. The number of the registered patients during these 3 years was 9752 and the mean response rate of every of the 47 prefectures was 51.4%. The registered patients with neurological deficits (Frankel A-D) were 7471 and the annual spinal cord injury incidence was 40.2 per million. The ratio of cervical cord injuries to more caudal SCI was 3:1. The age distribution and the causes of spinal cord injuries are presented in detaiL From the results of this study, the prevention campaign should be focused mainly on the following topics: sports and motorcycle accidents involving young people; traffic accidents involving adults; falling accidents involving aged people.
To survey the situation of traumatic spinal cord injuries (SCI) in Japan, the SCI Prevention Committee of the Japanese Medical Society of Paraplegia sent out by mail study charts in the form of questionnaires to institutions nationwide. Using the statistical method of the nationwide epidemiological survey described by Hashimoto et at, 1 the annual estimated incidence was obtained from the number of patients registered, and from the questionnaire reply rate at each prefecture. The number of registered patients in 1990 was 3465 and the mean reply rate was 56.6%. There were 2665 registered patients with a neurological deficit (Frankel A-D) and the annual SCI incidence was 39.4 per million.The male:female ratio was 4.3:1 and the ratio of cervical cord injures to those caudal to the cervical cord was 2.9:1. The mean age at the time of injury was 48.5 years. The cause most frequently seen was traffic accidents, the second most frequent being falls from a height. Besides those two, sports injuries and falls on level ground were the third most frequent causes of SCI in the young generation and in elderly people respectively.
The Injury Prevention Committee of the Japan Medical Society of Paraplegia (JMSoP) conducted a nationwide epidemiological survey on spinal cord injury (SCI) using postal questionnaires for 3 years periods from 1990 to 1992, and the annual incidence of the spinal cord injury was estimated as 40,2 per million. From this registry, we investigated SCI related to sports activities.In 3 years, 528 patients were registered and 374 of them had neurological deficits. The incidence was l.95 per million per annum. Mean age at injury was 28.5 years (10-77), and 88.1 % of the patients were males. Diving was the commonest cause of SCI (21.6%), which was followed by skiing (13.4%), football including rugby, American football and soccer (12.7%), sky sports (7.0%), judo (6.8%) and gymnastics (6.6%). Mean age at injury was higher than 30 years in skiing (38.6 years) and sky sports (38.2 years). Cervical injury was predominant in all but sky sports and accounted for 83.5% of SCI. Motor complete paralysis was reported in 35.0% of the patients. Bony injury was observed in 55.9% of the patients; most of the patients who sustained the SCI in diving and sky sports had bony injury, and no bony injury was detected in more than a half of the patients who sustained injuries in skiing, judo or gymnastics.Although the percentage of sports-related SCI was small in the present study as compared to the data from previous reports, it is not difficult to imagine the increase in the number of sports-related SCI. We have launched an injury prevention campaign and are planning to conduct a similar study in future to evaluate the effect of the campaign as well as the changes in the incidence and pattern of SCI.
SummaryPost-mortem microangiography has been performed in 12 patierUs with traumatic cervical cord injury, 2 patients with myelopathy, and one patient with post traumatic syringomyelia.Microangiography defined 4 zones in the injured spinal cord. In traumatic injury, the size and extent of the non-filling area (Zone 1) was directly related to the injury force. Subsequently these areas became cavitated. Surrounding the non-filling area, widely extending areas demonstrated filling of capillaries but showed damaged neurons and axons (Zone 2). In the chronic stage, Zone 2 replaced by gliomesenchymal tissue. The capillaries in the gliomesenchymal scars revealed a distorted abnormal arrangement (Zone 3).In a case with myelopathy, the hypervascular areas (Zone 4) were observed just around the chronically compressed area. The vascular increases were considered to be a reaction against chronic compression.In a patient with post-traumatic syringomyelia, the vascular network of the poster ior grey matter disappeared and the central arteries were distorted by the distending forces of the syrinx. The microangiographs suggested that vascular factors might play a significant role in original cavity formation; but in cavity extension, these factors were not primary. Key words: Spinal cord injury; Microangiography; Myelopathy, Post-traumatic syringomyelia; Autopsy studies.Regarding pathological studies of spinal cord injury, Wolman (1965), Bedbrook (1966, Kakulus (1976), Jellinger (1976, Kinoshita (1977) and others have reported on the pathology of traumatic spinal cord injury.Microangiography can demonstrate alterations in the small blood vessels of the central nervous system. Turnbull (1966), Crock (1977, Mannen (1963) and others have showed microangiographs of the spinal cord from unselected cada vers. Studies on the microangiography of spinal cord lesions in man are lacking.
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