Guest guest Posted June 16, 2001 Report Share Posted June 16, 2001 I found this very intresting , and thought imeadiatly of the newer shunt placement stuff someone discussed recently where its removing csf from the spinal arachnoid layer/level if i remember right , ....Is there a list of questions being gathered for the asap confrence next month .? ...all of you coming ...would you help me keep track of these abstracts to bring down ? in so scattered , and frantic with school ....that i bet ill end up forgetting em ! I'd sure like to read the full article . ..sarah in paradise Neurosurgery 2001 Mar;48(3):636-45; discussion 645-6 A spinal thecal sac constriction model supports the theory that induced pressure gradients in the cord cause edema and cyst formation. phson A, Greitz D, Klason T, Olson L, Spenger C. Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden. anna.josephson@... OBJECTIVE: Spinal cord cysts are a devastating condition that occur secondary to obstructions of the spinal canal, which may be caused by congenital malformations, trauma, spinal canal stenosis, tumors, meningitis, or arachnoiditis. A hypothesis that could explain how spinal cord cysts form in these situations has been presented recently. Therefore, a novel spinal thecal sac constriction model was implemented to test various aspects of this hypothesis. METHODS: Thecal sac constriction was achieved by subjecting rats to an extradural silk ligature at the T8 spinal cord level. Rats with complete spinal cord transection served as a second model for comparison. The animals underwent high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging and histological analysis. RESULTS: Thecal sac constriction caused edema cranial and caudal to the ligation within 3 weeks, and cysts developed after 8 to 13 weeks. In contrast, cysts in rats with spinal cord transection were located predominantly in the cranial spinal cord. Histological sections of spinal cords confirmed the magnetic resonance imaging results. CONCLUSION: Magnetic resonance imaging provided the specific advantage of enabling characterization of events as they occurred repeatedly over time in the spinal cords of individual living animals. The spinal thecal sac constriction model proved useful for investigation of features of the cerebrospinal fluid pulse pressure theory. Edema and cyst distributions were in accordance with this theory. We conclude that induced intramedullary pressure gradients originating from the cerebrospinal fluid pulse pressure may underlie cyst formation in the vicinity of spinal canal obstructions and that cysts are preceded by edema. PMID: 11270555 [PubMed - in process] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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