Initial treatment of traumatic spinal
This review provides a concise outline of the advances made in the care of patients and to the quality of life after a traumatic spinal
Aims. Traumatic central
Aims. Spinal deformity surgery carries the risk of neurological injury. Neurophysiological monitoring allows early identification of intraoperative
Aims. The aim of this study was to determine whether early surgical treatment results in better neurological recovery 12 months after injury than late surgical treatment in patients with acute traumatic spinal
Metastatic epidural compression of the spinal
There are many causes of paraspinal muscle weakness which give rise to the dropped-head syndrome. In the upper cervical spine the central portion of the spinal
We undertook a radiographic analysis with pre-operative computed tomographic myelography in 78 patients with idiopathic scoliosis in order to analyse rotation of the spinal
A total of 11 patients with combined traumatic injuries of the brachial plexus and spinal
1. A high incidence of paraplegia following operations for the correction of severe scoliosis in adults led to an investigation of the normal blood supply of the human spinal
Aims. This study aimed to investigate whether human umbilical
Aims. Non-coding microRNA (miRNA) in extracellular vesicles (EVs) derived from mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) may promote neuronal repair after spinal
Injuries to the spinal
We performed CT myelography in 38 patients with cervical myelopathy before and after laminoplasty to enlarge the canal. The sagittal and transverse diameters, the cross-sectional area, and the central point of the spinal
The most common injury in rugby resulting in
spinal
Injectable collagenase is an alternative to surgical
treatment for Dupuytren’s disease. Previous studies have reported
on the effectiveness of collagenase in finger contractures. This
prospective study reports on the short-term safety and efficacy
of collagenase treatment in five thumb and first web space Dupuytren’s
contractures. The thumb and first web space contractures were treated
with injectable collagenase in four consecutive patients (five hands) with
experience of previous surgical digital fasciectomy. The thumb contracture
was measured by angle and span in two planes of thumb extension
and abduction before injection and after manipulation. Collagenase
treatment resulted in release of the contracture with a mean increase
in thumb to index angle from 23° (10° to 35°) to 56° (45° to 60°)
in extension and from 30° (10° to 50°) to 58° (50° to 65°) in abduction
and a mean increase in span from 1.9 cm (1 to 3.5) to 3.9 cm (3
to 5) in extension and from 2.4 cm (1.5 to 3.5) to 3.9 cm (3 to
4.5) in abduction. All patients reported an increased range of movement
and function and described collagenase therapy as preferable to
surgery. In the short-term collagenase is an effective, well-tolerated
and safe alternative to surgery for Dupuytren’s disease of the thumb.
We studied MR images of the spine in a consecutive series of 100 patients with acute compression of the spinal
1. The treatment is described of a consecutive series of fourteen patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis causing a slip of the cervical vertebrae, mainly at the C.1-2 level, and a
Since 1981, during operations for spinal deformity, we have routinely used electrophysiological monitoring of the spinal
High-pressure injection injuries occur infrequently but are usually work-related and involve the non-dominant hand. The neck is a very rare site for such an injury. We describe the management of a 36-year-old man with a high-pressure grease-gun injection injury to his neck causing a cervical spinal