Spinal cord and nerve root blood flow in acute double level spinal stenosis

被引:12
作者
Jespersen, SM
Christensen, K
Svenstrup, L
Lindblad, BE
Hansen, ES
Bünger, C
机构
[1] Aarhus Univ Hosp, Inst Expt Clin Res, Aarhus, Denmark
[2] Aarhus Univ Hosp, Dept Orthopaed, Aarhus, Denmark
关键词
blood flow; evoked potentials; nerve roots; pigs; spinal cord; spinal stenosis; spinal cord injury;
D O I
10.1097/00007632-199712150-00013
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Study Design. Twenty-four pigs were randomized into three groups of eight pigs; a control group with 0% stenosis, a 25% stenosis group, and a 50% stenosis group. A fourth 75% stenosis group was added when results of the randomized experiment had been analyzed. Blood flow of the spinal cord and nerve roots and spinal evoked potentials were determined before and 1 hour after induction of the spinal stenoses. Objectives. To study and acute effects of different degrees of spinal stenosis on neural tissue blood flow and spinal evoked potentials. Summary and Background Data. Spinal cord dysfunction may be caused by vascular impairment or mechanical injury to neural tissue. Experimental double level compression of the cauda equina causes reversible nerve root edema, stasis, blood flow decrease, and compromised neural function. The vascular pathophysiology after spinal cord trauma was studied previously, and both increased and decreased neural tissue blood flow have been reported. Methods. Two level spinal stenosis was introduced by placement of stenosing bands around the dural sac at L4 and L6. Neurologic function was monitored by sensory and motor evoked potentials. Regional blood flow (RBF) was measured in the stenotic segments between the bands and other regions of neural tissue by radioactive microspheres before and after induction of stenosis. Results. Regional blood flow increased in the stenotic segments after 0% sham stenosis. Analysis of variance revealed no differences in RBF between the three randomized groups under comparable conditions of 0% stenosis. However, the RBF level of the added 75% group was lower than that of the other three groups. By comparison of RBF within groups before and after stenosis, no decrease in RBF was found between the stenosing bands in any of the groups. Fifty percent stenosis changed the amplitude of evoked potentials in half of the animals. Seventy-five percent stenosis caused severe changes in evoked potentials in 7 of 8 animals. Conclusions. Blood supply of the spinal cord and nerve roots in the segments between two central stenosis is preserved immediately after stenosis introduction by way of the segmental nerve pathway, even if nerve conduction is impaired.
引用
收藏
页码:2900 / 2910
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Nerve Root Sedimentation Sign Evaluation of a New Radiological Sign in Lumbar Spinal Stenosis [J].
Barz, Thomas ;
Melloh, Markus ;
Staub, Lukas P. ;
Lord, Sarah J. ;
Lange, Joern ;
Roeder, Christoph P. ;
Theis, Jean-Claude ;
Merk, Harry R. .
SPINE, 2010, 35 (08) :892-897
[42]   Spinal canal stenosis at the level of atlas [J].
Bhattacharjee, Suchanda ;
Mudumba, Vijayasaradhi ;
Aniruddh, Purohit K. .
JOURNAL OF CRANIOVERTEBRAL JUNCTION AND SPINE, 2011, 2 (01) :38-40
[43]   Cervical stenosis in spinal cord injury and disorders [J].
Burns, Stephen P. ;
Weaver, Frances ;
Chin, Amy ;
Svircev, Jelena ;
Carbone, Laura .
JOURNAL OF SPINAL CORD MEDICINE, 2016, 39 (04) :471-475
[44]   Spinal nerve root electroacupuncture for symptomatic treatment of lumbar spinal canal stenosis unresponsive to standard acupuncture: a prospective case series [J].
Inoue, Motohiro ;
Nakajima, Miwa ;
Hojo, Tatsuya ;
Kitakoji, Hiroshi ;
Itoi, Megumi .
ACUPUNCTURE IN MEDICINE, 2012, 30 (02) :103-108
[45]   Vagus Nerve Stimulation Prevents Endothelial Necroptosis to Alleviate Blood-Spinal Cord Barrier Disruption After Spinal Cord Injury [J].
Hui Chen ;
Zhou Feng ;
Lingxia Min ;
Mingliang Tan ;
Dongyun Zhang ;
Qiuwen Gong ;
Hongliang Liu ;
Jingming Hou .
Molecular Neurobiology, 2023, 60 :6466-6475
[46]   Vagus Nerve Stimulation Prevents Endothelial Necroptosis to Alleviate Blood-Spinal Cord Barrier Disruption After Spinal Cord Injury [J].
Chen, Hui ;
Feng, Zhou ;
Min, Lingxia ;
Tan, Mingliang ;
Zhang, Dongyun ;
Gong, Qiuwen ;
Liu, Hongliang ;
Hou, Jingming .
MOLECULAR NEUROBIOLOGY, 2023, 60 (11) :6466-6475
[47]   Spinal neurovascular coupling is preserved despite time-dependent alterations of spinal cord blood flow responses in a rat model of chronic back pain: implications for functional spinal cord imaging [J].
Paquette, Thierry ;
Eskandari, Nasim ;
Leblond, Hugues ;
Piche, Mathieu .
PAIN, 2023, 164 (04) :758-770
[48]   Acute and Chronic Sectioning of Fifth Lumbar Spinal Nerve Has Equivalent Effects on the Primary Afferents of Sciatic Nerve in Rat Spinal Cord [J].
Shehab, Safa Aldeen S. .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 2009, 517 (04) :481-492
[49]   Nerve root biopsy in intramedullary spinal cord lymphoma: Technical note and case report [J].
Maragkos, Georgios A. ;
Motiei-Langroudi, Rouzbeh ;
Pihan, German ;
Wong, Eric T. ;
Papavassiliou, Efstathios .
INTERDISCIPLINARY NEUROSURGERY-ADVANCED TECHNIQUES AND CASE MANAGEMENT, 2020, 19
[50]   Surgical management of multilevel cervical spinal stenosis and spinal cord injury complicated by cervical spine fracture [J].
Xu, Zhao-Wan ;
Lun, Deng-Xing .
JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY AND RESEARCH, 2014, 9