Impact of Surgical Timing on Motor Level Lowering in Motor Complete Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury Patients

Paula Valerie ter Wengel, Erin Elisabeth Anna de Gendt, Enrico Martin, Charlotte Yvette Adegeest, Janneke Marjan Stolwijk-Swuste, Michael G. Fehlings, F. Cumhur Oner, William Peter Vandertop

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Abstract

Patients with complete traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI) have a low potential to recover ambulation. Motor level recovery, adjacent to the level of injury, could influence functional independency. This study addresses whether surgical timing influences motor level recovery in patients with motor complete (American Spinal Injury Association [ASIA] Impairment Scale A [AIS A]) and motor incomplete (AIS B) tSCI. A retrospective cohort study was performed in the Netherlands in patients with AIS A/B tSCI (C2-L2), who consecutively underwent surgery between January 2010 and April 2020. Neurological examination was performed directly at presentation to the emergency room and at discharge from the rehabilitation facility. Motor level lowering, AIS grade, and upper and lower extremity motor score recovery were calculated for patients who underwent early (< 24 h) and late (24 h+) surgery. A total of 96 patients met the inclusion criteria. In the multi-variate analysis, late surgical decompression (24 h+) was negatively associated with ≥1 motor level lowering and ≥2 AIS grade improvement [odds ratio (OR) 0.11 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.01, 0.67], p = 0.046, and OR 0.06 [95% CI: 0.00, 047], p = 0.030. respectively). The presence of sacral sparing (AIS B) at initial examination, and cervical level of the tSCI were associated with ≥1 motor level lowering. In addition, AO Spine C-Type injuries were negatively associated with any type of neurological recovery, except motor level lowering. Although sensorimotor complete injuries as well as thoracolumbar injuries negatively influence neurological recovery, early surgical decompression (< 24 h) appears independently associated with enhanced neurological recovery in patients with traumatic spinal cord injury despite level and severity of injury.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)651-657
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of Neurotrauma
Volume39
Issue number9-10
Early online date12 Jan 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2022

Keywords

  • complete injury
  • outcome assessment
  • spinal cord injury
  • spinal fusion
  • surgical decompression

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