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Neurological complaints after unsuccessful spinal anaesthesia as a manifestation of incipient syringomyelia
10
Citations
3
References
1998
Year
SurgeryFollowing Case ReportSpinal DisorderOrthopaedic SurgerySpinal TumorPain ManagementNeurologyNeurological ComplaintsNeuropathologyMedical LiteratureRegional AnesthesiaSpinal Cord InjuryIncipient SyringomyeliaUnsuccessful Spinal AnaesthesiaNeurological SurgeryLumbosacral RadiculopathyNeuroanatomySpinal TraumaRegional AnaesthesiaAnesthesiaMedicineAnesthesiology
The medical literature sometimes reports neurological complications after spinal or epidural anaesthesia. In a few cases, the onset of symptoms can be a sign of a pre-existing disease without a primary connection with regional anaesthesia. In the following case report, the patient complained of paraesthesias in both legs after a failed spinal anaesthesia, even though the needle had been placed intrathecally. Only neurological examination and nuclear magnetic resonance imaging revealed the presence of syringomyelia.
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