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Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma: Risk Factor and Clinical Outcome

We report a series of epidural hematomas which cause neurologic deterioration after spinal surgery, and have taken risk factors and prognostic factors into consideration. We retrospectively reviewed the database of 3720 cases of spine operation in a single institute over 7 years (1998 April-2005 Jul...

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Autores principales: Yi, Seong, Yoon, Do Heum, Kim, Keung Nyun, Kim, Sang Hyun, Shin, Hyun Chul
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Yonsei University College of Medicine 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2688151/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16807981
http://dx.doi.org/10.3349/ymj.2006.47.3.326
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author Yi, Seong
Yoon, Do Heum
Kim, Keung Nyun
Kim, Sang Hyun
Shin, Hyun Chul
author_facet Yi, Seong
Yoon, Do Heum
Kim, Keung Nyun
Kim, Sang Hyun
Shin, Hyun Chul
author_sort Yi, Seong
collection PubMed
description We report a series of epidural hematomas which cause neurologic deterioration after spinal surgery, and have taken risk factors and prognostic factors into consideration. We retrospectively reviewed the database of 3720 cases of spine operation in a single institute over 7 years (1998 April-2005 July). Nine patients who demonstrated neurologic deterioration after surgery and required surgical decompression were identified. Factors postulated to increase the postoperative epidural hematoma and to improve neurologic outcome were investigated. The incidence of postoperative epidural hematoma was 0.24%. Operation sites were cervical 3 cases, thoracic 2 cases, and lumbar 4 cases. Their original diagnoses were tumor 3 cases, cervical stenosis 2 cases, lumbar stenosis 3 cases and herniated lumbar disc 1case. The symptoms of epidural hematomas were neurologic deterioration and pain. After decompression, clinical outcome revealed complete recovery in 3 cases (33.3%), incomplete recovery in 5 cases (55.6%) and no change in 1 case (11.1%). Factors increasing the risk of postoperative epidural hematoma were coagulopathy from medical illness or anticoagulation therapy (4 cases, 44.4%) and highly vascularized tumor (3 cases, 33.3%). The time interval to evacuation of complete recovery group (29.3 hours) was shorter than incomplete recovery group (66.3 hours). Patients with coagulopathy and highly vascularized tumor were more vulnerable to spinal epidural hematoma. The postoperative outcome was related to the preoperative neurological deficit and the time interval to the decompression.
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spelling pubmed-26881512009-06-04 Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma: Risk Factor and Clinical Outcome Yi, Seong Yoon, Do Heum Kim, Keung Nyun Kim, Sang Hyun Shin, Hyun Chul Yonsei Med J Original Article We report a series of epidural hematomas which cause neurologic deterioration after spinal surgery, and have taken risk factors and prognostic factors into consideration. We retrospectively reviewed the database of 3720 cases of spine operation in a single institute over 7 years (1998 April-2005 July). Nine patients who demonstrated neurologic deterioration after surgery and required surgical decompression were identified. Factors postulated to increase the postoperative epidural hematoma and to improve neurologic outcome were investigated. The incidence of postoperative epidural hematoma was 0.24%. Operation sites were cervical 3 cases, thoracic 2 cases, and lumbar 4 cases. Their original diagnoses were tumor 3 cases, cervical stenosis 2 cases, lumbar stenosis 3 cases and herniated lumbar disc 1case. The symptoms of epidural hematomas were neurologic deterioration and pain. After decompression, clinical outcome revealed complete recovery in 3 cases (33.3%), incomplete recovery in 5 cases (55.6%) and no change in 1 case (11.1%). Factors increasing the risk of postoperative epidural hematoma were coagulopathy from medical illness or anticoagulation therapy (4 cases, 44.4%) and highly vascularized tumor (3 cases, 33.3%). The time interval to evacuation of complete recovery group (29.3 hours) was shorter than incomplete recovery group (66.3 hours). Patients with coagulopathy and highly vascularized tumor were more vulnerable to spinal epidural hematoma. The postoperative outcome was related to the preoperative neurological deficit and the time interval to the decompression. Yonsei University College of Medicine 2006-06-30 2006-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2688151/ /pubmed/16807981 http://dx.doi.org/10.3349/ymj.2006.47.3.326 Text en Copyright © 2006 The Yonsei University College of Medicine http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0) which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Yi, Seong
Yoon, Do Heum
Kim, Keung Nyun
Kim, Sang Hyun
Shin, Hyun Chul
Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma: Risk Factor and Clinical Outcome
title Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma: Risk Factor and Clinical Outcome
title_full Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma: Risk Factor and Clinical Outcome
title_fullStr Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma: Risk Factor and Clinical Outcome
title_full_unstemmed Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma: Risk Factor and Clinical Outcome
title_short Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma: Risk Factor and Clinical Outcome
title_sort postoperative spinal epidural hematoma: risk factor and clinical outcome
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2688151/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16807981
http://dx.doi.org/10.3349/ymj.2006.47.3.326
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