Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

medicine

Thoracic and thoraco-lumbar discs herniations: diagnosis and therapeutic management

Dakar médical, Volume 50, No. 2, Year 2005

Summary Management of symptomatic thoracic disc hemiations is difficult because of their polymorphic symptomatology and hardness to join the intervertebral thoracic disc surgically. The objective of this study was first to show the difficult diagnosis of these discal herniations and their posterior approach particularities; secondly, to analyse our results and compare them with those of the literature. This retrospective study analyses a four patients series operated between January 1997 and march 2003 using intraoperative somatosensory evoked potentials. All of them had before surgical management, a lumbar Xray or a MRI. The average postoperative follow-up was seven months. All patients were males with a mean age of 39.5 years old (extremes: 22-59). They had systematisation of their lumboradiculalgia, leading to an average delayed diagnosis of 10 months. The disc herniation was paramedian in three cases, median in one,. It was in T10-T11 in one case, in T11-T12 in two and in T12-L1 in one. All the patients were operated on with a posterior approach, recording the intraoperative somatosensory evoked potentials. Disc herniation was resected in three cases. Functional results were satisfactory (no pains for three patients) in the follow-up period of seven months. Every patient presenting with an atypical lumboradiculalgia must have a spine MRI to diagnose the symptomatic thoracic disc herniation. Surgery has good results if technical details are used respecting the threatened spinal cord.
Statistics
Citations: 5
Authors: 5
Affiliations: 1
Identifiers
ISSN: 00491101
Research Areas
Health System And Policy
Study Design
Cohort Study