2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacr.2015.10.004
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ACR Appropriateness Criteria Myelopathy

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
(72 reference statements)
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“…There are no detailed guidelines in the setting of thoracic or lumbar spinal trauma. Please see the ACR Appropriateness Criteria Ò topic on "Suspected Spine Trauma" [6] in the setting of additional traumatic symptoms and the ACR Appropriateness Criteria Ò topic on "Myelopathy" [7] if other neurologic symptoms are present.…”
Section: Discussion Of Procedures By Variantmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…There are no detailed guidelines in the setting of thoracic or lumbar spinal trauma. Please see the ACR Appropriateness Criteria Ò topic on "Suspected Spine Trauma" [6] in the setting of additional traumatic symptoms and the ACR Appropriateness Criteria Ò topic on "Myelopathy" [7] if other neurologic symptoms are present.…”
Section: Discussion Of Procedures By Variantmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Depending on other symptoms associated with ataxia, the site of pathology may be narrowed down to a particular segment or level of the cord, and imaging can be tailored to that site to offer a smaller field of view and more detailed visualization of that particular portion of the cord for detection of even subtle pathology and small lesions. Please also reference the ACR Appropriateness Criteria Ò topic on "Myelopathy" [7] in the appropriate clinical context.…”
Section: Discussion Of Procedures By Variantmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Ultimately, clinical suspicion of slowly progressive myelopathy necessitates cross-sectional imaging of the spinal cord, and MR imaging is the preferred modality over computed tomography for this indication. (13,14) The prognosis for SCD patients is largely dependent upon the age and the extent of their clinical disease burden at the time of diagnosis. Patients aged < 50 years with a shorter duration of illness are more likely to have a positive outcome with treatment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After reviewing several guidelines for the diagnosis of thoracolumbar spine injury in adults with trauma, three guidelines were selected (131415). Previous studies recommended an imaging test to confirm thoracolumbar spine injury when any of the following are present: localizing signs of thoracolumbar injury, a neurologic deficit, cervical spine fracture, Glasgow Coma Scale score less than 15 points, major distracting injury, or a history of alcohol or drug addiction (161718).…”
Section: Evidence Summarymentioning
confidence: 99%