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Good day Dr. Corenman,
I am joeffrey a staff nurse here in Bukidnon ProvinciAl Hospital San fernando, province of bukidnon Philippines. We had a patient for three months already a 17 year old laborer. His condition started 12wks PTA, while working as a laborer, when there was claimed trauma to the posterior neck, shoulders, and upper trunk area with a sack-full of feeds which caused pain at the same area associated with neck stiffnesslasting for 4 weeks.
Since our hospital is just a primary hospital we referred him to tertiary hospital in Cagayan de Oro City Philippines. And they have these following laboratory results.Cervical xray- no demonstrable fracture; straightening of cervical spine,positional versus musculoskeletal spasm. Subcutaneous emphysema both sides of neck.
Cxr- confluent densities in left upper lobe, and parahilar areas, to consider contusion in the setting of trauma, can not rule out pneumonia. ET tube in place,
MRI CERVICAL AREA edema with component of sub-acute hematoma.
Current problems of the patient:
Complete spinal cord injury C2 secondary to intraspianal Haemorrhage probably secodary to Arteriovenous malformation.I decided to write you about this matter Doc because I have seen the family effort wanting their child survive even us medical workers know that the prognosis is very poor. The patient was sent back here in our hospital just yesterday july 5, 2014. Because the hospital in Cagayan de oro have on 3 ventilators in their ICU and they prioritized those patient with good prognosis. Right now we had contineous ambubagging the latest VS of the patient is Temp 37.8C, PR 82bpm, RR 22 cpm Bp 100/60mmhg.
We hope that you can help us Doc Corenman. God bless.
With love,
Joeffrey
This patient has an AVM (arteriovenous malformation) that has caused injury to the circulation of the spinal cord. An AVM is a direct connection between the arteries and veins. Normally, the artery feeds the capillaries. These capillaries feed oxygen and nutrients to the nerves of the spinal cord. The veins then take away the deoxygenated blood.
An AVM bipasses these capillaries and dumps the oxygenated blood directly into the vein. This can starve the cord of energy and cause damage to the cord.
This patient with a C2 cord injury has no ability to breathe on his own due to the loss of the phrenic nerve (C3-5) which supplies the diaphram. There might be some chance of nerve recovery but this will take time (up to three months or more) to determine that. That is a long time for someone to continuously squeeze that ambubag to keep this patient alive.
Dr. Corenman
PLEASE REMEMBER, THIS FORUM IS MEANT TO PROVIDE GENERAL INFORMATION ON SPINE ANATOMY, CONDITIONS AND TREATMENTS. TO GET AN ACCURATE DIAGNOSIS, YOU MUST VISIT A QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL IN PERSON.
Donald Corenman, MD, DC is a highly-regarded spine surgeon, considered an expert in the area of neck and back pain. Trained as both a Medical Doctor and Doctor of Chiropractic, Dr. Corenman earned academic appointments as Clinical Assistant Professor and Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, and his research on spine surgery and rehabilitation has resulted in the publication of multiple peer-reviewed articles and two books. -
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