Occult tethered cord syndrome: the case for surgery
- PMID: 16848085
- DOI: 10.3171/ped.2006.104.5.302
Occult tethered cord syndrome: the case for surgery
Abstract
Object: Controversy exists regarding proper indications for surgical lysis of the terminal filum in children with voiding dysfunction and tethered spinal cord. Recently, surgery has been offered to children who have a normally positioned conus medullaris and no terminal filum abnormality visible on 1.5-tesla magnetic resonance images (referred to as minimal or occult tethered cord syndrome [TCS]). The author evaluates existing clinical and scientific evidence relevant to this controversy.
Methods: Five retrospective, observational, noncontrolled studies of surgical terminal filum lysis for occult TCS in children were identified. Two further studies in which the authors reported surgical results in children with a normal-level conus medullaris were also identified.
Conclusions: These studies document encouraging clinical outcomes following surgery. Clinicopathological evidence suggests that occult TCS may result from radiographically occult structural abnormalities of the terminal filum. Although a preponderance of Class III clinical evidence supports the use of surgical filum lysis to treat occult TCS, no Class I or II evidence exists. Clinical practice varies; therefore, performance of a prospective randomized clinical trial of surgical terminal filum lysis for the treatment of occult TCS is advocated.
Comment in
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Occult tethered cord.J Neurosurg. 2007 May;106(5 Suppl):411-3; author reply 413-4. doi: 10.3171/ped.2007.106.5.411. J Neurosurg. 2007. PMID: 17566214 No abstract available.
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