Cargando…

Clinico-Radiological Profile of Patients With Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Five Years Observation From a Single-Centered Tertiary Hospital in Nepal

Objective: We aim to correlate the prevalence of symptoms of the lateral medullary syndrome (LMS) based on radiological classification. Methods: A five-year record of 41 patients diagnosed with LMS and admitted to a tertiary care center in Nepal was reviewed. We used chi-square tests to compare symp...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shrestha, Ramesh, Pandit, Rohit, Acharya, Ankit, Kharel, Ghanshyam, Maharjan, Anzilmani S, Phuyal, Subash, Bishokarma, Suresh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9472711/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133505
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.28834
_version_ 1784789353075048448
author Shrestha, Ramesh
Pandit, Rohit
Acharya, Ankit
Kharel, Ghanshyam
Maharjan, Anzilmani S
Phuyal, Subash
Bishokarma, Suresh
author_facet Shrestha, Ramesh
Pandit, Rohit
Acharya, Ankit
Kharel, Ghanshyam
Maharjan, Anzilmani S
Phuyal, Subash
Bishokarma, Suresh
author_sort Shrestha, Ramesh
collection PubMed
description Objective: We aim to correlate the prevalence of symptoms of the lateral medullary syndrome (LMS) based on radiological classification. Methods: A five-year record of 41 patients diagnosed with LMS and admitted to a tertiary care center in Nepal was reviewed. We used chi-square tests to compare symptoms between rostral and caudal groups and different horizontal subtypes. Results: The subtype prevalence in the horizontal classification of LMS was large (31.7%), lateral (22%), dorsal (19.5%), typical (14.6%), and ventral (12.2%). The most common symptoms in the typical subtype of the horizontal classification were: pain/temperature loss in the contralateral body (7.3%) and dysphagia (7.3%); in the ventral subtype, swaying on the Romberg test (12.2%), dysarthria (9.8%) and dizziness (9.8%); in the dorsal subtype, headache (12.2%) and vomiting (12.2%). Whereas headache (22.2%) and lateropulsion on standing (14.6%), swaying on the Romberg test (14.6%), nausea/vomiting (14.6%) were common in the large subtype, and nausea/vomiting (19.5%) and headache (17.1%) in the lateral subtypes. Whereas, in rostrocaudal classification, the rostral subtype (61%) was more common than the caudal subtype (31%). There was no significant variation in symptoms based on the rostrocaudal classification of LMS. Conclusion: The common clinical manifestations are different for different radiological subtypes of LMS. Further comprehensive studies are essential to understand the prevalence of symptoms in different radiological subtypes and the clinical-radiologic correlation in LMS.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9472711
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Cureus
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94727112022-09-20 Clinico-Radiological Profile of Patients With Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Five Years Observation From a Single-Centered Tertiary Hospital in Nepal Shrestha, Ramesh Pandit, Rohit Acharya, Ankit Kharel, Ghanshyam Maharjan, Anzilmani S Phuyal, Subash Bishokarma, Suresh Cureus Neurology Objective: We aim to correlate the prevalence of symptoms of the lateral medullary syndrome (LMS) based on radiological classification. Methods: A five-year record of 41 patients diagnosed with LMS and admitted to a tertiary care center in Nepal was reviewed. We used chi-square tests to compare symptoms between rostral and caudal groups and different horizontal subtypes. Results: The subtype prevalence in the horizontal classification of LMS was large (31.7%), lateral (22%), dorsal (19.5%), typical (14.6%), and ventral (12.2%). The most common symptoms in the typical subtype of the horizontal classification were: pain/temperature loss in the contralateral body (7.3%) and dysphagia (7.3%); in the ventral subtype, swaying on the Romberg test (12.2%), dysarthria (9.8%) and dizziness (9.8%); in the dorsal subtype, headache (12.2%) and vomiting (12.2%). Whereas headache (22.2%) and lateropulsion on standing (14.6%), swaying on the Romberg test (14.6%), nausea/vomiting (14.6%) were common in the large subtype, and nausea/vomiting (19.5%) and headache (17.1%) in the lateral subtypes. Whereas, in rostrocaudal classification, the rostral subtype (61%) was more common than the caudal subtype (31%). There was no significant variation in symptoms based on the rostrocaudal classification of LMS. Conclusion: The common clinical manifestations are different for different radiological subtypes of LMS. Further comprehensive studies are essential to understand the prevalence of symptoms in different radiological subtypes and the clinical-radiologic correlation in LMS. Cureus 2022-09-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9472711/ /pubmed/36133505 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.28834 Text en Copyright © 2022, Shrestha et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/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 author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Neurology
Shrestha, Ramesh
Pandit, Rohit
Acharya, Ankit
Kharel, Ghanshyam
Maharjan, Anzilmani S
Phuyal, Subash
Bishokarma, Suresh
Clinico-Radiological Profile of Patients With Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Five Years Observation From a Single-Centered Tertiary Hospital in Nepal
title Clinico-Radiological Profile of Patients With Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Five Years Observation From a Single-Centered Tertiary Hospital in Nepal
title_full Clinico-Radiological Profile of Patients With Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Five Years Observation From a Single-Centered Tertiary Hospital in Nepal
title_fullStr Clinico-Radiological Profile of Patients With Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Five Years Observation From a Single-Centered Tertiary Hospital in Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Clinico-Radiological Profile of Patients With Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Five Years Observation From a Single-Centered Tertiary Hospital in Nepal
title_short Clinico-Radiological Profile of Patients With Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Five Years Observation From a Single-Centered Tertiary Hospital in Nepal
title_sort clinico-radiological profile of patients with lateral medullary syndrome: a five years observation from a single-centered tertiary hospital in nepal
topic Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9472711/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133505
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.28834
work_keys_str_mv AT shrestharamesh clinicoradiologicalprofileofpatientswithlateralmedullarysyndromeafiveyearsobservationfromasinglecenteredtertiaryhospitalinnepal
AT panditrohit clinicoradiologicalprofileofpatientswithlateralmedullarysyndromeafiveyearsobservationfromasinglecenteredtertiaryhospitalinnepal
AT acharyaankit clinicoradiologicalprofileofpatientswithlateralmedullarysyndromeafiveyearsobservationfromasinglecenteredtertiaryhospitalinnepal
AT kharelghanshyam clinicoradiologicalprofileofpatientswithlateralmedullarysyndromeafiveyearsobservationfromasinglecenteredtertiaryhospitalinnepal
AT maharjananzilmanis clinicoradiologicalprofileofpatientswithlateralmedullarysyndromeafiveyearsobservationfromasinglecenteredtertiaryhospitalinnepal
AT phuyalsubash clinicoradiologicalprofileofpatientswithlateralmedullarysyndromeafiveyearsobservationfromasinglecenteredtertiaryhospitalinnepal
AT bishokarmasuresh clinicoradiologicalprofileofpatientswithlateralmedullarysyndromeafiveyearsobservationfromasinglecenteredtertiaryhospitalinnepal