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SPINAL CORD INJURY Jessica Ryu, T4 Tulane University School of Medicine.

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Presentation on theme: "SPINAL CORD INJURY Jessica Ryu, T4 Tulane University School of Medicine."— Presentation transcript:

1 SPINAL CORD INJURY Jessica Ryu, T4 Tulane University School of Medicine

2 Anatomy Anterior spinal artery, 2 posterior spinal arteries All 3 receive contributions from the radicular branches 4-10 radicular branches which arise from the vertebral, cervical, intercostal, lumbar arteries Anterior spinal supplies 2/3 of spinal cord (motor function) Posterior arteries supply posterior columns and horns

3 Anatomy Continued Cervical and superior thoracic region: derived from cervical branches of the vertebral and ascending and deep cervical arteries Middle and lower thoracic cord: radicular arteries less prominent Lower thoracic and lumbar cord: T7-conus blood supply is artery of Adamkiewicz Greatest susceptibility to cord ischemia: thoracic region

4 Cervical Spine Injuries Spinal shock, immediate, lasts for hours to about a month Flaccid paralysis Bradycardia, hypotension and EKG changes Alveolar hypoventilation, hypoxemia and decreased ability to protect airway Management: Induction: awake or IV rapid sequence (awake intubation is safest) Awake: nose is cocainized, oropharynx sprayed with 4% lidocaine, superior laryngeal nerve blocked by injection, recurrent laryngeal can be blocked by injection but in full stomach situation that is probably not advised (if RLN not blocked, cough ability retained)

5 Cervical Spine Injuries Continued Important levels: Diaphragm Patients don’t survive with injuries above C2 Important note: patients should be positioned for surgery before they are put to sleep if they have an unstable C-spine

6 Paralysis Two stages: flaccid and spastic Flaccid: 1-4 weeks, manifested by total absence of neuro function below lesion, usually characterized by spinal shock Spastic: occurs after 4 weeks, manigested by motor hyperreflexia and autonomic hyperreflexia Problems experienced by paraplegics: bowel, bladder, anemia, dehydration Spinal anesthesia is a good choice in paraplegics (blocks afferent impulses) To evaluate level of anesthesia in paraplegic test for sympathogalvanic response

7 Monitoring Motor injury detection Evoked potentials: somato-sensory evoked potentials provide ability to monitor sensory pathway functional integrity Wake up Test

8 Important Facts to Remember Flaccid paralysis (hypovolemia, bradycardia, increased sensitivity to anesthetics) Ventilation problems and increased risk of gastric aspiration Hyperkalemia (muscle membrane becomes chemically active – 1 day to 1 year) Hypothermia (no temp regulation below level of lesion) Renal insufficiency (risk of infection)

9 Important Facts to Remember Unstable thoracic or lumbar spine injuries: patients can be put to sleep on their beds and then moved Sux contraindicated for about 1 day- 1 year after injury (causes release of K+ from motor end plate membrane and the muscle membrane after spinal cord injury is abnormal)

10 Thank you


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