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Pathophysiology and surgical treatment of spinal adhesive arachnoid pathology: patient series

Authors :
Yasuhiro Chiba
Hiroyuki Imamura
Toshimitsu Aida
Izumi Koyanagi
Genki Uemori
Masami Yoshino
Source :
Journal of Neurosurgery: Case Lessons. 2
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG), 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Spinal adhesive arachnoid pathology is a rare cause of myelopathy. Because of rarity and variability, mechanisms of myelopathy are unknown. The authors retrospectively analyzed patients to understand pathophysiology and provide implications for surgical treatment. OBSERVATIONS Nineteen consecutive patients were studied. Thirteen patients had a secondary pathology due to etiological disorders such as spinal surgery or hemorrhagic events. They received arachnoid lysis (4 patients), syringo-subarachnoid (S-S) shunt (8 patients) with or without lysis, or anterior decompression. Three of them developed motor deterioration after lysis, and 6 patients needed further 8 surgeries. Another 6 patients had idiopathic pathology showing dorsal arachnoid cyst formation at the thoracic level that was surgically resected. With mean follow-up of 44.3 months, only 4 patients with the secondary pathology showed improved neurological grade, whereas all patients with idiopathic pathology showed improvement. LESSONS The idiopathic pathology was the localized dorsal arachnoid adhesion that responded to surgical treatment. The secondary pathology produced disturbed venous circulation of the spinal cord by extensive adhesions. Lysis of the thickened fibrous membrane with preservation of thin arachnoid over the spinal veins may provide safe decompression. S-S shunt was effective if the syrinx extended to the level of normal subarachnoid space.

Details

ISSN :
26941902
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurosurgery: Case Lessons
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........be68891f3240222c8951e51141eef958