Cervical Intradural Glass Fragment: A Rare Cause of Neuropathic Pain
Date
2012Author
Sencer, Altay
Aras, Yavuz
Akcakaya, Mehmet Osman
Yorukoglu, Ali Guven
Ovalioglu, Cem
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Intradural foreign bodies after penetrating injuries are seen very rarely. Limited number of cases of glass fragments in the spinal canal were reported previously. Migration of foreign bodies and delayed onset of neurological symptoms due to foreign bodies were also reported. In this report a 33-year-old male patient was presented, who had penetration of glass fragments through oropharyngeal mucosa in to the spinal canal after crashing into a glass door. Glass fragment, which migrated through an unusual route, and reached cervical spinal intradural space, caused neuropathic pain with radicular symptoms, 21 years after the initial injury. This case report emphasize that after penetrating injuries of spine, foreign bodies may remain silent until the patient became symptomatic years after the initial injury and these foreign bodies may migrate to extreme distant and unexpected locations in the central nervous system.
Collections
- Makale [92796]