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Spontaneous cervical epidural hematoma: Insight into this occurrence with case examples

Brian Fiani, Ryan Jarrah, Nicholas J. Fiani, Juliana Runnels

2021Surgical Neurology International14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: century, spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma (SSEH) is known as the idiopathic accumulation of blood within the spinal canal's epidural space, causing symptoms varying from general back pain to complete paraplegia. With varying etiologies, a broad spectrum of severity and symptoms, a time-dependent resolution period, and no documented diagnosis or treatment algorithm, SSEH is a commonly misunderstood condition associated with increasing morbidity. While SSEH can occur at any vertebrae level, 16% of all SSEH cases occur in the cervical spine, making it a region of interest to clinicians. CASE DESCRIPTION: Herein, the authors present two case examples describing the clinical presentation of SSEH, while also reviewing the literature to provide a comprehensive overview of its presentation, pathology, and treatment. The first case is a patient with nontraumatic sudden onset neck pain with rapidly progressing weakness. The second case is a patient with painless weakness that developed while taking 325 mg of aspirin daily. CONCLUSION: Clinicians should keep SSEH in their differential diagnosis when seeing patients with nontraumatic sources of weakness in their extremities. The appropriate steps should be followed to diagnose and treat this condition with magnetic resonance imaging and surgical decompression if there are progressive neurological deficits. There is a continued need for more extensive database-driven studies to understand better SSEHs clinical presentation, etiology, and ultimate treatment.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSpinal epidural hematomaWeaknessEtiologyNeck painPresentation (obstetrics)SurgeryMagnetic resonance imagingBack painHematomaCervical vertebraeSpinal cord compressionRadiologySpinal cordEpidural hematomaPathologyPsychiatryAlternative medicineSpinal Hematomas and ComplicationsSpine and Intervertebral Disc PathologyInfectious Diseases and Tuberculosis