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Title: Acute spinal cord injury: magnetic resonance imaging correlated with myelopathy. Author: Yamashita Y, Takahashi M, Matsuno Y, Kojima R, Sakamoto Y, Oguni T, Sakae T, Kim EE. Journal: Br J Radiol; 1991 Mar; 64(759):201-9. PubMed ID: 2021792. Abstract: Thirty-one patients (29 males and two females, 13-87 years of age (mean, 46.7 years] with acute spinal cord injury were studied by MR (magnetic resonance) imaging and the results were correlated with neurological findings. Magnetic resonance images were obtained with a 0.5 T superconductive MR scanner (Phillips Gyroscan S5). Initial imaging was performed within 24 hours after trauma in 13 patients, 1-7 days in 13 patients and 7-14 days in five patients. Twenty-six patients underwent follow-up examinations with MR imaging. Cord abnormalities including cord compression (23 patients), cord swelling (seven patients), and abnormal signal intensities on either T1 or T2-weighted images (26 patients) were observed on initial examination. Multivariate analysis showed that cord compression and abnormal intensities on T1-weighted images were important prognostic indicators. Hyperintensity on T2-weighted images was non-specific but correlated well with clinical recovery. Magnetic resonance imaging is useful in predicting the prognosis and for planning treatment following spinal cord injuries.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]