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Brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury

Objective: High-energy impact to the head, neck, and shoulder can result in cervical spine as well as brachial plexus injuries. Because cervical spine injuries are more common, this tends to be the initial focus for management. We present a case in which the initial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)...

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Autores principales: Macyszyn, Luke J., Gonzalez-Giraldo, Ernesto, Aversano, Michael, Heuer, Gregory G., Zager, Eric L., Schuster, James M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: © AOSpine International 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3427963/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22956928
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0030-1267068
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author Macyszyn, Luke J.
Gonzalez-Giraldo, Ernesto
Aversano, Michael
Heuer, Gregory G.
Zager, Eric L.
Schuster, James M.
author_facet Macyszyn, Luke J.
Gonzalez-Giraldo, Ernesto
Aversano, Michael
Heuer, Gregory G.
Zager, Eric L.
Schuster, James M.
author_sort Macyszyn, Luke J.
collection PubMed
description Objective: High-energy impact to the head, neck, and shoulder can result in cervical spine as well as brachial plexus injuries. Because cervical spine injuries are more common, this tends to be the initial focus for management. We present a case in which the initial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was somewhat misleading and a detailed neurological exam lead to the correct diagnosis. Clinical presentation: A 19-year-old man presented to the hospital following a shoulder injury during football practice. The patient immediately complained of significant pain in his neck, shoulder, and right arm and the inability to move his right arm. He was stabilized in the field for a presumed cervical-spine injury and transported to the emergency department. Intervention: Initial radiographic assessment (C-spine CT, right shoulder x-ray) showed no bony abnormality. MRI of the cervical-spine showed T2 signal change and cord swelling thought to be consistent with a cord contusion. With adequate pain control, a detailed neurological examination was possible and was consistent with an upper brachial plexus avulsion injury that was confirmed by CT myelogram. The patient failed to make significant neurological recovery and he underwent spinal accessory nerve grafting to the suprascapular nerve to restore shoulder abduction and external rotation, while the phrenic nerve was grafted to the musculocutaneous nerve to restore elbow flexion. Conclusion: Cervical spinal-cord injuries and brachial plexus injuries can occur by the same high energy mechanisms and can occur simultaneously. As in this case, MRI findings can be misleading and a detailed physical examination is the key to diagnosis. However, this can be difficult in polytrauma patients with upper extremity injuries, head injuries or concomitant spinal-cord injury. Finally, prompt diagnosis and early surgical renerveration have been associated with better long-term recovery with certain types of injury.
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spelling pubmed-34279632012-09-06 Brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury Macyszyn, Luke J. Gonzalez-Giraldo, Ernesto Aversano, Michael Heuer, Gregory G. Zager, Eric L. Schuster, James M. Evid Based Spine Care J Article Objective: High-energy impact to the head, neck, and shoulder can result in cervical spine as well as brachial plexus injuries. Because cervical spine injuries are more common, this tends to be the initial focus for management. We present a case in which the initial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was somewhat misleading and a detailed neurological exam lead to the correct diagnosis. Clinical presentation: A 19-year-old man presented to the hospital following a shoulder injury during football practice. The patient immediately complained of significant pain in his neck, shoulder, and right arm and the inability to move his right arm. He was stabilized in the field for a presumed cervical-spine injury and transported to the emergency department. Intervention: Initial radiographic assessment (C-spine CT, right shoulder x-ray) showed no bony abnormality. MRI of the cervical-spine showed T2 signal change and cord swelling thought to be consistent with a cord contusion. With adequate pain control, a detailed neurological examination was possible and was consistent with an upper brachial plexus avulsion injury that was confirmed by CT myelogram. The patient failed to make significant neurological recovery and he underwent spinal accessory nerve grafting to the suprascapular nerve to restore shoulder abduction and external rotation, while the phrenic nerve was grafted to the musculocutaneous nerve to restore elbow flexion. Conclusion: Cervical spinal-cord injuries and brachial plexus injuries can occur by the same high energy mechanisms and can occur simultaneously. As in this case, MRI findings can be misleading and a detailed physical examination is the key to diagnosis. However, this can be difficult in polytrauma patients with upper extremity injuries, head injuries or concomitant spinal-cord injury. Finally, prompt diagnosis and early surgical renerveration have been associated with better long-term recovery with certain types of injury. © AOSpine International 2010-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3427963/ /pubmed/22956928 http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0030-1267068 Text en © Thieme Medical Publishers
spellingShingle Article
Macyszyn, Luke J.
Gonzalez-Giraldo, Ernesto
Aversano, Michael
Heuer, Gregory G.
Zager, Eric L.
Schuster, James M.
Brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury
title Brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury
title_full Brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury
title_fullStr Brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury
title_full_unstemmed Brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury
title_short Brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury
title_sort brachial plexus injury mimicking a spinal-cord injury
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3427963/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22956928
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0030-1267068
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