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Journal Article

Citation

Sgouros S, Sharif S. Childs Nerv. Syst. 2008; 24(3): 357-60; discussion 361-4.

Affiliation

Department of Paediatric Neurosurgery, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Steelhouse Lane, Birmingham B4 6NH, UK. S.Sgouros@bham.ac.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00381-007-0531-2

PMID

18026959

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Post-traumatic syringomyelia is described in adults after spinal trauma but extremely rarely seen in children, especially in the first year of life. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We describe a boy who, at the age of 7 months, suffered spinal trauma during a car accident when he was held at his mother's lap and suffered extreme flexion of his torso. He suffered a mid-shaft fracture of his right femur, treated with hip spica for 6 weeks. After removal of the spica, it was noticed that he was not moving his legs, but he had preserved pain sensation in the lower half of his trunk and legs. A spine magnetic resonance scan performed 2 months after the injury showed a compressed wedge fracture of the body of T5 vertebra, kyphosis and a large syringomyelia cavity extending from T4 to T8. He had two operations to control the syringomyelia with laminotomy-laminoplasty, dissection of the arachnoid adhesions initially and drainage of the cavity on the second operation, with only modest success. He remains paraplegic 7 years after the injury. He has received thoracic brace immediately after the first spinal operation, which avoided kyphosis. DISCUSSION: Spinal trauma is rare in the first year of life; hence, post-traumatic syringomyelia is very rarely seen in infants. Nevertheless, it should be suspected after a major trauma, in the presence of paraplegia. Surgical treatment of post-traumatic syringomyelia in young children has the additional consideration of post-laminotomy kyphosis; hence, thoracic brace should be used early.


Language: en

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