Search results for "Nerve root"

showing 10 items of 22 documents

Tissue Sparing Posterior Cervical Indirect Decompression and Fusion in Foraminal Stenosis

2016

Treatment for patients with cervical foraminal stenosis that present with cervical radiculopathy has experienced rapid progress. Cervical spine surgical options have improved through advances in imaging, instrumentation, implant innovations and novel surgical techniques. While historical treatments are largely safe, comorbidities associated with procedures such as ACDF, TDR, and posterior foraminotomy beg the question if these procedures are too much surgery for select patients that could benefit from a tissue sparing approach. This chapter will introduce a novel, less disruptive surgical technique for achieving indirect decompression and fusion utilizing an intervertebral cervical implant.…

Foraminal stenosismedicine.medical_specialtyNerve rootbusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentRadiographyIndirect decompressionFacet jointSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureForaminotomymedicineRadiologyImplantTissue sparingbusiness
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Analgesic Treatment of Bone Metastases

2013

The presence of bone metastases predicts the presence of pain and is the most common cause of cancer-related pain. Although bone metastases do not involve vital organs, they may determine deleterious effects in patients with prolonged survival. Bone fractures, hypercalcaemia, neurologic deficits and reduced activity associated with bone metastases result in an overall compromise in the patient’s quality of life. A metastasis is a consequence of a cascade of events including a progressive growth at the primary site, vascularization phase, invasion, detachment, embolization, survival in the circulation, arrest at the site of a metastasis, extravasion, evasion of host defense and progressive g…

Palliative careHypercalcaemiaNerve rootbusiness.industryAnalgesicmedicine.diseaseMetastasisBone remodelingmedicine.anatomical_structureOsteoclastAnesthesiamedicinemedicine.symptombusinessmuscle spasm
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Inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathies: Clinical and immunological aspects, current therapies, and future perspectives

2020

Inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathies are heterogeneous disorders characterized by immune-mediated leukocyte infiltration of peripheral nerves and nerve roots leading to demyelination or axonal degeneration or both. Inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathies can be divided into acute and chronic: Guillain–Barré syndrome and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy and their variants. Despite major advances in immunology and molecular biology have been made in the last years, the pathogenesis of these disorders is not completely understood. This review summarizes the current literature of the clinical features and pathogenic mechanisms of inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathies and focuses…

0301 basic medicinePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyNerve rootImmunologylcsh:MedicineChronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathymedicine.disease_causeGuillain–Barré syndromeinflammatory neuropathiesAutoimmunity03 medical and health scienceschronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy0302 clinical medicineperipheral nervous systemmedicineImmunology and AllergyGuillain-Barre syndromebusiness.industryautoimmunitylcsh:Rmedicine.diseasePeripheral030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurePeripheral nervous systemSettore MED/26 - NeurologianeurophysiologybusinessInfiltration (medical)030217 neurology & neurosurgeryEuropean Journal of Inflammation
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Nerve Root and Types of Needles Used in Transforaminal Injections

2014

The use of transforaminal epidural injections of steroids is common practice in pain medicine, in patients with radicular pain resistant to conventional treatments such as physiotherapy or anti-inflammatory medications. The goal of these injections is to deposit steroids in the proximity of nerve roots, using the epidural or the transforaminal route. The procedure is performed using a translaminar, caudal, or transforaminal approach.

medicine.anatomical_structureDorsal root ganglionNerve rootRadicular painbusiness.industryPain medicineAnesthesiaEpidural injectionsmedicineIn patientTransforaminal approachmedicine.diseasebusiness
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Microsurgical fenestration of perineural cysts to the thecal sac at the level of the distal dural sleeve

2011

Background Surgery for symptomatic sacral perineural cysts remains an issue of discussion. Assuming micro-communications between the cyst and thecal sac resulting in a valve mechanism and trapping of CSF as a pathomechanism, microsurgical fenestration from the cyst to the thecal sac was performed to achieve free CSF communication. Methods In 13 consecutive patients (10 female, 3 male), MRI revealed sacral perineural cysts and excluded other pathologies. Micro-communication between the thecal sac and the cysts was shown by delayed contrast filling of the cysts on postmyelographic CT. Surgical fenestration achieved free CSF communication between the thecal sac and cysts in all patients. The p…

MaleMicrosurgerymedicine.medical_specialtyTarlov cystendocrine systemCauda EquinaDura matermedicine.medical_treatmentSacral perineural cyst; Tarlov cyst; Meningeal cyst; Meningeal diverticulum; Sacral radiculopathyClinical Neurology610Neurosurgical ProceduresTarlov cyst03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineparasitic diseasesmedicineHumansCyst030212 general & internal medicineSacral perineural cystAgedRetrospective StudiesMeningeal cystClinical Articlemedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryCauda equinaInterventional radiologyMiddle AgedMicrosurgerymedicine.diseasePerineural CystTarlov Cysts3. Good healthSurgeryRadiographymedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleSurgeryDura MaterNeurology (clinical)Thecal sacSpinal Nerve RootsMeningeal diverticulumbusinessMedicine & Public Health; Neurosurgery; Minimally Invasive Surgery; Surgical Orthopedics; Neuroradiology; Neurology; Interventional Radiology030217 neurology & neurosurgerySacral radiculopathyActa Neurochirurgica
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Neck Pain and Rehabilitation

2016

Neck pain is par excellence one of the most common disorders of the musculoskeletal system, second only to low back pain. It constitutes 40 % of all backache. The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain of cervical origin coming from an area between the nuchal line and another imagi-nary line that passes through the lower end of the spinous process of the first thoracic vertebra and the sagittal plans tangent to the side edges of the neck. This definition considers therefore posterior pain which in turn can be divided into high pain, up to C3, and lower pain, down from C4. Also, as all diseases, it can be divided into acute and chronic neck pain, merely according…

Settore MED/34 - Medicina Fisica E Riabilitativaneck pannociceptive elicitation rehabilitation nerve roots
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Transverse fracture-dislocation of the sacrum: a diagnostic pitfall and a surgical challenge.

2002

Transverse fracture-dislocations of the sacrum are rare. Associated lesions of the lumbosacral spine as well as neurological injuries are common. Conventional radiographs of the pelvis often fail to clearly visualize the fracture. Delayed diagnosis increases the risk of progressive neurological disfunction. True lateral sacral views and CT-scans with 3-dimensional reconstructions are very helpful in establishing the full extent of the injury. These examinations should be considered in all patients with a history of high energy trauma and clinical signs indicating lumbosacral injury, such as severe low back pain and neurological disturbances of the lower extremities. The management of transv…

musculoskeletal diseasesAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtySacrumNerve rootBone ScrewsJoint DislocationsFracture Fixation InternalDeformityMedicineHumansSpinal canalPelvisPalsyLumbar Vertebraebusiness.industryGeneral Medicinemusculoskeletal systemSacrumLow back painInternal FixatorsSurgeryRadiographymedicine.anatomical_structureSpinal FracturesSurgeryFemalemedicine.symptomNervous System DiseasesbusinessLumbosacral jointActa chirurgica Belgica
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[S1 Herpes zoster localization: acute urinary retention in woman].

2011

Acute urinary retention in women is rare. The varicella-zoster virus causes inflammatory lesions of the sensory-root ganglions, meninges and, less frequently, spinal cord. Herpes zoster has been reported to affect, although rarely, lower urinary tract innervations, and acute urinary retention can be thought to occur in the presence of sacral dermatome involvement. Usually it is located in S2–4 dermatome and the prognosis for acute urinary retention is benign resolving in about 20 days. We present a case in which the S1 dermatome was interested and acute urinary retention developed. After 10 days of specific therapy and self catheterism the problem resolved.

medicine.medical_specialtySacrumUrinary systemAcyclovirGastroenterologyAntiviral AgentsHerpes ZosterVirusS1 dermatomeInternal medicinemedicineHumansIntermittent Urethral CatheterizationUrinary retentionbusiness.industryMeningesGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedUrinary RetentionSpinal cordSacrumSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureTreatment OutcomeDermatomeAcute DiseaseFemalemedicine.symptombusinessSpinal Nerve RootsUrologia
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Distribution, classification, and development ofDrosophila glial cells in the late embryonic and early larval ventral nerve cord.

1994

To facilitate the investigation of glial development inDrosophila, we present a detailed description of theDrosophila glial cells in the ventral nerve cord. A GAL4 enhancer-trap screen for glial-specific expression was performed. Using UAS-lacZ and UAS-kinesin-lacZ as reporter constructs, we describe the distribution and morphology of the identified glial cells in the fully differentiated ventral nerve cord of first-instar larvae just after hatching. The three-dimensional structure of the glial network was reconstructed using a computer. Using the strains with consistent GAL4 expression during late embryogenesis, we traced back the development of the identified cells to provide a glial map …

Nerve rootEmbryogenesisCentral nervous systemAnatomyBiologyNeuromereEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyNeuroepithelial cellmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemVentral nerve cordGeneticsmedicineDevelopmental biologyDevelopmental BiologyRoux's archives of developmental biology : the official organ of the EDBO
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The impact of sacral root anatomy on selective electrical stimulation for bladder evacuation.

1998

Although different structures have been studied with electrostimulation to elicit bladder evacuation, only the sacral root remains feasible for clinical application at present. However, the resultant concomitant contractions of the bladder and sphincteric muscles have been the principal problem over the last few decades. Attempts to identify fibers within the sacral ventral root that innervate the detrusor predominantly have been made by microsurgery alone or in combination with advanced electrical blocking techniques. This article evaluates our past and present efforts to achieve voiding in light of the mixed nature of sacral root anatomy.

medicine.medical_specialtyBlocking techniquesUrinary bladderUrinary retentionbusiness.industryUrologymedicine.medical_treatmentUrinary BladderStimulationElectric Stimulation TherapyAnatomyMicrosurgeryurologic and male genital diseasesmusculoskeletal systemSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureUrinary IncontinencemedicineBladder evacuationAnimalsHumansmedicine.symptomUrinary Bladder NeurogenicbusinessSpinal Nerve RootsWorld journal of urology
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