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eRAM

encyclopedia of Rare Disease Annotation for Precision Medicine




Disease cauda equina syndrome
Comorbidity C0392548|cauda equina syndrome
Sentences 21
PubMedID- 24693959 The exclusion criteria are: cauda equina syndrome, persistently exacerbated symptoms, progressive neurologic signs (sensory or motor changes); previous spine surgery; senile dementia, impaired cognitive function or other cerebral disease, severe psychiatric or psychological disorders; severe, concomitant disease (neuromuscular scoliosis, neurodegenerative disease); all contraindications to corticosteroid injection (e.g., insulin-dependent diabetes); alcohol/drug abuse; significant renal or hepatic disease; pregnant, lactating or planning a pregnancy; hypersensitive reaction to acupuncture treatment; inability to comprehend or express oneself in the korean language; an individual deemed to be ineligible by a physician; or refusal to participate in the trial or to provide informed consent.
PubMedID- 24353932 cauda equina syndrome occurs in 2.8% of decompressions for spinal stenosis.
PubMedID- 21286446 The cauda equina syndrome compresses multiple nerve roots of the sacro-lumbar area and manifests neurological symptoms such as pain in the back, the pelvis, or the lower extremities, as well as vesical dysfunction.
PubMedID- 24453661 cauda equina syndrome (ces) is classically characterized by compression of the lumbar, sacral and coccygeal nerve roots distal to the end of the medullary cone at the height of vertebrae l1 and l2.1 although it is a disease of low incidence in the population, at around 1 case per 33000 to 1 case per 100000 inhabitants,2 its sequelae still generate high public health costs.
PubMedID- 20532079 We report a case of cauda equina syndrome following spinal anaesthesia in a patient who had no identifiable risk factor.
PubMedID- 24829842 cauda equina syndrome due to epidural abscess should be high in the differential diagnosis of patients presenting with fever, back pain, decreased perianal sensation, and bowel incontinence but other disease processes can masquerade as this spinal cord pathology.
PubMedID- 22174708 cauda equina syndrome due to hematoma formation, a rare complication with a reported incidence of 2.7/100,000 epidural blocks, was found to result in permanent deficit in more than two-third of the cases [74].
PubMedID- 24348291 After case reports of cauda equina syndrome were reported with the use of spinal micro-catheters for csa, these micro-catheters were withdrawn from clinical practice in the united states and australia,[21] but continued to be used in europe with no further neurological sequelae.
PubMedID- 22848805 The neurologic complication was a cauda equina syndrome which appeared in the second postoperative day in a patient treated for a type a l1 fracture by t12–l2 mis.
PubMedID- 22549019 It predisposes to premature degeneration of the lumbosacral junction, and is a frequent cause of cauda equina syndrome, especially in german shepherd dogs.
PubMedID- 25949850 There were no serious complications such as cauda equina syndrome or nerve damage resulting in paralysis.
PubMedID- 23125496 The reported disadvantages of reduction are distraction of roots and cauda equina syndrome in patients with severe spondylolisthesis whereas, the reported advantages of reduction are neurological decompression by foraminotomy, correction of the lumbosacral kyphosis, and restoration of alignment in the sagittal plane.
PubMedID- 25848355 At the time of the third lm progression, the patient presented with a cauda equina syndrome and cerebellar impairment resulting in an inability to walk.
PubMedID- 21165315 Spanier and stambough [4] reported on delayed postoperative epidural hematomas that caused acute cauda equina syndrome 16 days after lumbar decompression and fusion in 2000.
PubMedID- 22606513 Although rare, bowel and bladder function should be reviewed given the potential for cauda equina syndrome in the setting of severe associated spondylolisthesis.
PubMedID- 22740824 cauda equina syndrome (ces) is a complex clinical entity due to compression of lumbosacral spinal nerve roots encompassed in the dural sac.
PubMedID- 24020045 cauda equina syndrome (ces) has various signs and symptoms, such as back pain, sciatic neuralgia, paraparesis, sensory disturbances in the lower extremities, and loss of visceral function.
PubMedID- 22013254 We report a case of cauda equina syndrome (ces) after a spinal anaesthesia in a patient with underlying asymptomatic tubercular arachnoiditis.
PubMedID- 21044326 Exclusion criteria are: 1) cauda equina syndrome requiring urgent surgery; 2) current fracture, infection or significant deformity (> 15° lumbar scoliosis); 3) current enrolment in another spine related treatment study; 4) clinically relevant peripheral arterial disease (confirmed by vascular specialist in patients without palpable pulses in the lower limb).
PubMedID- 22620685 cauda equina syndrome was suspected, for which he underwent a magnetic resonance imaging (mri) scan of the spine that revealed spinal canal filling and lesions in the thoracic and lumbar regions.
PubMedID- 25705342 [6] reported that cauda equina syndrome might present in a variety of ways.

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