Aetiology
Acute spinal cord compression
- Trauma
- High energy injury
- Particularly affects the mobile segments of the spine i.e. cervical
- Tumours - haemorrhage or collapse
- Extradural - usually metastasis e.g. lung, breast, prostate
- Intradural - extramedulary meningioma, schwannoma
- Intramedullary - astrocytoma, ependymoma
- Infection
- Epidural abscess - bloodborne staph, TB
- Post surgery/trauma
- Spontaneous haemorrhage
- Epidural, subdural, intramedullary
- Trauma, bleeding diathesis, anticoagulants, aterio-venous malformations
- Prolapsed intervertebral disc
- L4-L5 and L5-S1 are the most common levels for disc prolapse - both will cause sciatica
- Large disc herniations can cause cauda equina syndrome
Chronic spinal cord compression
- Degenerative disease, mainly spinal canal stenosis
- Osteophyte formation, bulging of intervertebral discs, facet joint hypertrophy, subluxation
- Tumours
- Rheumatoid arthritis
Clinical presentation
Symptoms
- Motor, sensory and autonomic dysfunction can occur
- Cervical spine lesions can produce quadriplegia
- Thoracic spine lesions produce paraplegia
- Lumbar spine lesions can affect L4, L5 and sacral nerve roots
- Sensory symptoms can include sensory loss and paraesthesia; light touch, proprioception and joint position sense are reduced
- The sensory level is usually 2-3 dermatome levels below the level of anatomical compression
Signs
- Upper motor neurone signs: increased tone, brisk reflexes, pyramidal/corticospinal pattern of weakness
- Pyramidal weakness below the level of the lesion
- Cervical: arms and legs
- Thoracolumbar: legs
Specific patterns of pathology
Cord transection
- Complete lesion - all motor and sensory modalities affected
- Sensory and motor level
- Initially a flaccid arreflex paralysis - 'spinal shock'
- Upper motor neurone signs appear later
Brown-Sequard syndrome (cord hemisection)
- Ipsilateral motor level and dorsal column sensory level - loss of motor function, deep touch and position on ipsilateral side
- Contralateral spinothalamic sensory level - loss of pain, temperature and light touch on contralateral side

Central cord syndrome
- Hyperflexion or extension injury to already stenotic neck
- Predominantly distal upper limb weakness
- 'Cape-like' spinothalamic sensory loss
- Lower limb power preserved
- Dorsal columns preserved

Chronic spinal cord compression
- Upper motor neurone signs tend to predominate
Investigations
- MRI is the imaging technique of choice
Management
Trauma
- Immbolise
- Investigate - X-ray/CT, MRI
- Decompress and stabilise - surgery, traction, external fixation
Metastatic cord compression
- Depends on patient and tumour
- Dexamethasone
- Chemo/radiotherapy
- Surgical decompression and stabilisation
Primary tumours
- Surgical excision
Infection
- Antimicrobial therapy
- Surgical drainage of abscess
- Stabilisation where required
Haemorrhage
- Reverse anticoagulation
- Surgical decompression
Degenerative disease
- Surgical decompression +/- stabilisation