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1.
Cureus ; 16(3): e55353, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38559548

ABSTRACT

White cord syndrome is a rare entity, as there are very few cases described in the current literature. Postoperative MRI examination reveals cord intrinsic changes, including edema and ischemia. It is also described as a reperfusion injury of the spinal cord. This report depicts a rare case of "white cord syndrome" with tetraplegia after posterior laminectomy and fusion of the cervical spine in a patient with Klippel-Feil syndrome. A 33-year-old male patient with Klippel-Feil syndrome presented to our department with cervical myelopathy, claudication, deteriorating neurological status, imbalance, and lower limb spasticity. Due to kyphotic malformation of the cervical spine, a two-stage surgical intervention was scheduled. The patient first underwent anterior spinal fusion of C4-C6 with corpectomy of C5, where many anatomical and visceral differentiations were signed, so the surgical team was enhanced by a vascular surgeon. The postoperative period was uneventful and the patient was discharged after a week of hospitalization without any neurological deterioration. A second surgical intervention was scheduled after two months where laminectomy of C5-C7 and posterior fusion of C5-T1 were carried out. However, due to intraoperative spinal instability and various anatomical spinal variations, a third surgery, which would be occipitocervical fusion, was decided as the final surgical solution. During the third surgical operation, after the laminectomy of C1 to C5 and the placement of the occipital plate, the screws, and the two rods in situ, complete nullification of the intraoperative neurophysiologic control was signed. The internal fixation was removed immediately, the wake-up test revealed tetraplegia below C5, and the patient was transferred to the ICU. Immediate MRI revealed no spinal cord hematoma; however, spinal cord edema was present. The patient underwent a tracheostomy and remained quadriplegic with a sensory level of T8 and motor level of C5 and was discharged to a rehabilitation center. The possibility of white cord syndrome should be explained by surgeons before any cervical decompression surgery, as well as a thorough neurological examination should be performed postoperatively. The early recognition and prompt management of white cord syndrome is recommended.

2.
J Clin Med ; 12(2)2023 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36675510

ABSTRACT

The aim of this review and meta-analysis is to assess recent clinical trials concerning the combination of operative treatment of rotator cuff tears and the administration of PRP and its effect on clinical scores and postoperative retear rates. The trials were used to compare the combination of PRP treatment and arthroscopic rotator cuff repair to arthroscopy alone. Twenty-five clinical trials were reviewed. A risk-of-bias assessment was made for all randomized clinical trials included, using the Cochrane collaboration's tool as well as a quality assessment for all non-randomized studies utilizing the Newcastle−Ottawa scale. The PRP-treated patients showed statistically significant improvement postoperatively compared to control groups concerning the Constant−Murley (mean difference 2.46, 95% CI 1.4−3.52, p < 0.00001), SST (mean difference 0.32, 95% CI 0.02−0.63, p = 0.04), and UCLA (mean difference 0.82, 95% CI 0.23−1.43, p = 0.07) scores. A statistically significant decrease of retear rates in the PRP-treated patients, with a risk ratio of 0.78 (95% CI 0.65−0.94, p = 0.01), was found. We believe that the results presented have positive aspects, especially concerning the retear risk, but are yet inconclusive concerning clinical results such as shoulder pain and function.

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