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Apport de l’IRM dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques

Slow spinal cord compressions are due to the development of an expansive lesion within the medullary canal. This is a very common condition whose diagnosis is primarily clinical. The magnetic resonance imaging occupies a central and currently irreplaceable position in diagnosis and localization as w...

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Autores principales: Badji, Nfally, Deme, Hamidou, Akpo, Geraud, Ndong, Boucar, Toure, Mouhamadou Hamine, Diop, Sokhna Ba, Niang, El Hadji
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The African Field Epidemiology Network 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5075438/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27800076
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2016.24.221.8525
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author Badji, Nfally
Deme, Hamidou
Akpo, Geraud
Ndong, Boucar
Toure, Mouhamadou Hamine
Diop, Sokhna Ba
Niang, El Hadji
author_facet Badji, Nfally
Deme, Hamidou
Akpo, Geraud
Ndong, Boucar
Toure, Mouhamadou Hamine
Diop, Sokhna Ba
Niang, El Hadji
author_sort Badji, Nfally
collection PubMed
description Slow spinal cord compressions are due to the development of an expansive lesion within the medullary canal. This is a very common condition whose diagnosis is primarily clinical. The magnetic resonance imaging occupies a central and currently irreplaceable position in diagnosis and localization as well as in etiological research. Etiology of cancer is predominant in Europe. This study aims to describe the MRI features of slow spinal cord compressions and to determine its etiologic profile. This is a retrospective study of 97 cases whose data were collected at the Department of Radiology, National University Hospital Centre (CHUN) of Fann, over a period of 30 months (from March 8, 2010 to September 29 2012). All patients referred for slow spinal compression occurred in a non traumatic context were included in the study. The average age of patients was 42.6 years, ranging between 04 months and 85 years. We studied the topography of lesions (spinal floor, ductal compartments), their enhancement and their etiological criteria. The review protocol allowed the realization of T1-weighted sequences with no injection of gado, T2-weighted sequences, STIR sequences and T2-weighted DRIVE sequences centered on lesions levels or suspicious areas. MRI allowed to determine the exact location and the extent of lesions. The involvement of the thoracic spine occurred in 42% of cases, followed by the cervical spine in 32% of cases. The lumbosacral damages and multi-stage damages were found in 18% and 8% of cases respectively. Extradural lesions were found in 87% of cases, followed by intradural extramedullary lesions in 08% of cases and intramedullary lesions in 05% of cases. The peculiarity of etiologic profile of our study is the prevalence of infectious epiduritis and the relative frequency of metastatic epiduritis compared to the Western series. The vertebral-medullary MRI occupies a crucial place in the positive, topographic and etiological diagnosis of spinal cord compressions.
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spelling pubmed-50754382016-10-31 Apport de l’IRM dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques Badji, Nfally Deme, Hamidou Akpo, Geraud Ndong, Boucar Toure, Mouhamadou Hamine Diop, Sokhna Ba Niang, El Hadji Pan Afr Med J Case Series Slow spinal cord compressions are due to the development of an expansive lesion within the medullary canal. This is a very common condition whose diagnosis is primarily clinical. The magnetic resonance imaging occupies a central and currently irreplaceable position in diagnosis and localization as well as in etiological research. Etiology of cancer is predominant in Europe. This study aims to describe the MRI features of slow spinal cord compressions and to determine its etiologic profile. This is a retrospective study of 97 cases whose data were collected at the Department of Radiology, National University Hospital Centre (CHUN) of Fann, over a period of 30 months (from March 8, 2010 to September 29 2012). All patients referred for slow spinal compression occurred in a non traumatic context were included in the study. The average age of patients was 42.6 years, ranging between 04 months and 85 years. We studied the topography of lesions (spinal floor, ductal compartments), their enhancement and their etiological criteria. The review protocol allowed the realization of T1-weighted sequences with no injection of gado, T2-weighted sequences, STIR sequences and T2-weighted DRIVE sequences centered on lesions levels or suspicious areas. MRI allowed to determine the exact location and the extent of lesions. The involvement of the thoracic spine occurred in 42% of cases, followed by the cervical spine in 32% of cases. The lumbosacral damages and multi-stage damages were found in 18% and 8% of cases respectively. Extradural lesions were found in 87% of cases, followed by intradural extramedullary lesions in 08% of cases and intramedullary lesions in 05% of cases. The peculiarity of etiologic profile of our study is the prevalence of infectious epiduritis and the relative frequency of metastatic epiduritis compared to the Western series. The vertebral-medullary MRI occupies a crucial place in the positive, topographic and etiological diagnosis of spinal cord compressions. The African Field Epidemiology Network 2016-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5075438/ /pubmed/27800076 http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2016.24.221.8525 Text en © Nfally Badji et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ The Pan African Medical Journal - ISSN 1937-8688. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Series
Badji, Nfally
Deme, Hamidou
Akpo, Geraud
Ndong, Boucar
Toure, Mouhamadou Hamine
Diop, Sokhna Ba
Niang, El Hadji
Apport de l’IRM dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques
title Apport de l’IRM dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques
title_full Apport de l’IRM dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques
title_fullStr Apport de l’IRM dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques
title_full_unstemmed Apport de l’IRM dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques
title_short Apport de l’IRM dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques
title_sort apport de l’irm dans la prise en charge des compressions médullaires lentes non traumatiques
topic Case Series
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5075438/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27800076
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2016.24.221.8525
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