[Neurologic disorders after injuries of the spine]
- PMID: 1493276
[Neurologic disorders after injuries of the spine]
Abstract
The most frequent result of a cervical or dorsal spinal cord injury is a transverse lesion with quadriplegia or paraplegia, total loss of bladder and bowel control, breakdown of sympathetic function, and complete loss of sensory function. Partial cord lesion leading to central/anterior/posterior or Brown-Séquard syndromes are rare. Progressive clinical signs of cord damage are only rarely due to sub- or epidural hematoma or edema; in nearly all cases, they point to a persistent instability of the spine.
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