Artículos de revistas
EFFECTS OF DECOMPRESSION TIME AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY ON NEUROLOGIC RECOVERY IN WISTAR RATS
Fecha
2010Registro en:
Acta Ortopédica Brasileira, v.18, n.6, p.315-320, 2010
1413-7852
Autor
NETTO, Cesar de Cesar
GAIA, Leonardo Franco Pinheiro
SATTIN, Alexandre Adorno
CRISTANTE, Alexandre Fogaca
MARCON, Raphael Martus
BARROS FILHO, Tarcisio Eloy Pessoa de
OLIVEIRA, Reginaldo Perilo
ROCHA, Ivan Dias
DIAS, Arthur Roncon
OMORI, Clarissa Harumi
Institución
Resumen
Objective Traumatic spinal Cord injuries are common in patients with high energy trauma and have significant morbidity and mortality rates as well as high psychological and social costs causing a major impact on public health To date the treatment of such lesions remains controversial with various studies in the literature comparing the results of non surgical treatment with immediate early or late surgical decompression The objective of the present study is to compare the results of immediate and early (within 1 hour) spinal Cord decompression Methods In the belief that the surgical treatment obtains the best result this experimental study has a case control design with histopathological and functional analysis of the results of surgical treatment of 25 Wistar mice submitted to posterior laminectomy immediately or after one hour of spinal Cord compression Results in terms of functional and neurological deficit the responses were better in the mice treated with immediate surgical decompression than in those treated one hour after the lesion (p=0 036) Conclusion The earlier the decompression of spinal Cord injuries is performed the better the end results in terms of the function and presence of neurological deficit