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Imaging of Spinal Stroke Institute of Neuroradiology, University of Zurich, Switzerland USZ / NRA Spinal cord infarction: frequency not established, large clinical investigations are lacking ~1% of all strokes, annual incidence of 12 in 100,000 occurrence rate at death: 0.23% (9/3784) autopsies » small arterial vessels with low flow rates » extensive collateral network between the main medullary arteries at the spinal cord surface USZ / NRA Arteries supplying the spinal cord T3 T8 T8 Lazorthes, G. et al. Rev Neurol 1966;115:1055-1068. Novy, J. et al. Arch Neurol 2006;63:1113-1120. USZ / NRA USZ / NRA Spinal cord infarction: clinical symptoms acute onset, severe back pain bilateral weakness, paresthesias and sensory loss loss of sphincter control evident within a few hours »confounding diagnoses (acute transverse myelopathy, viral myelitis, Guillain-Barré, mass lesions), develop over 24-72 h with slower evolution, rarely painful »epidural/subdural hematomas need exclusion by MRI symptoms and degree of deficits depend on the affected level and size of the vascular territories USZ / NRA USZ / NRA Spinal cord infarction: etiology Classification according to location of vascular pathology – intrinsic cord vessels: arteritis (SLE, granulomatous), emboli of atheroma, disc compression – ASA occlusion: arteritis, trauma, spondylosis, adhesive arachnoiditis, spinal DSA, anesthesia – aortic disease: dissecting aneurysm, surgery, aortic thrombosis, atherosclerotic embolization – uncommon causes: decompression sickness, circulatory failure (cardiac arrest, hypotension) – no identifiable cause: 50-75% of cases USZ / NRA Spinal cord infarction: pathogenesis a) mechanical triggering factor: - anterior, posterior - unilateral or bilateral coincides with the level of the involved radicular artery b) hypoperfusion factor: - central and transverse involve several levels in the thoracolumbar region USZ / NRA Novy, J. et al. Arch Neurol 2006;63:1113-1120. USZ / NRA USZ / NRA Imaging of spinal cord infarction: MRI – T2-w imaging not sensitive in the first hours after symptoms onset (abnormal signal in 45%-67%) – “snake-eyes” on axial T2-w images indicate involvement of the ventral gray matter – contrast enhancement in the subacute stage – hemorrhagic transformation seen as hyperintense signal on the T1-weighted images. USZ / NRA Vulnerability of spinal cord to anoxia ● The gray matter is predominantly affected due to its high vulnerability to anoxia ● Motorneurons lose electrophysiological reflex responses 1.5 times faster as interneurons and 3 times faster as dorsal column neurons ● terminal ischemia (failure of conduction) occurs after 20 minutes of asphyxia ● abrupt anoxia shortens the survival time of all structures USZ / NRA Gelfan S, Tarlov IM. J Neurophysiol 1955;18:170-188. Th4 70 y, history aortic dissection, status after grafting, hypertension, coronary artery disease presents with acute paraplegia. USZ / NRA DW-MRI of the spinal cord Challenges: fine structure and elasticity of the SC requirement for high in-plane resolution Artifacts related to motion – CSF pulsations – respiratory motion – swallowing Spatially rapid changes in susceptibility USZ / NRA Imaging of spinal cord infarction: DW-MRI demonstration of intracelullar, cytotoxic edema diffusion abnormality reported 4-30 h following onset, always in the presence of T2-w signal abnormality decrease (75%) of the calculated ADC values in follow-up performed 5-20 d following infarction, early normalization of ADC with persistent T2-w abnormality USZ / NRA USZ / NRA 26-year-old man left-sided neck pain, acute onset lower limb weakness and difficulty voiding. USZ / NRA USZ / NRA 2 w follow-up 2 m follow-up USZ / NRA Zhang J., et al. J Spinal Disord Tech. 2005; 18:277-282 USZ / NRA Zhang J, et a. JMRI 2007;26:848-854 Spinal cord infarction Prognosis and outcome – substantial motor, sensory, bladder and bowel dysfunction – short-term mortality rate 20-25% – vascular, infectious and other medical complications – long term prognosis is determined by the degree of cord sparing (unilateral infarcts have better prognosis) – early diagnosis may contribute to improved patient management USZ / NRA USZ / NRA