
Spontaneous cervical epidural hematoma mimicking a transient ischemic attack
Author(s) -
Kudo Shunsuke,
Soma Mayuko,
Tanaka Keiji,
Hashimoto Jun
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acute medicine and surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2052-8817
DOI - 10.1002/ams2.350
Subject(s) - medicine , epidural hematoma , neurological examination , neck pain , surgery , hemiparesis , hematoma , laminectomy , emergency department , anesthesia , stroke (engine) , physical examination , epidural space , spinal cord , angiography , mechanical engineering , alternative medicine , pathology , psychiatry , engineering
Dear Editor, Spontaneous cervical epidural hematoma, resulting from spontaneous bleeding into the cervical epidural space, causes sudden neck pain and cervical spinal cord compression, which generally requires emergency decompressive laminectomy. However, it occasionally subsides without surgical intervention. Although cervical epidural hematoma patients typically present with tetraparesis or paraparesis, 24% of the cases present with hemiparesis, thereby mimicking stroke. Neurological examination is crucial in differentiating cervical epidural hematoma from stroke (Table S1). Particularly, cervical epidural hematomas have three prominent features on neurological examination: hemiparesis spares the face, cranial nerve deficits are absent, and a circumferential boundary below which there is impairment of sensation is observed. Deep tendon reflexes and other findings are not useful in the differentiation. However, we found that if the neurological symptoms rapidly improve before arrival at the emergency department, neurological examination is not informative and differentiating between spontaneous cervical epidural hematoma and transient ischemic attack (TIA) could be challenging. A 67-year-old man with no relevant medical history suddenly experienced neck and left shoulder pain after skiing, although he neither injured his head nor neck during skiing. Shortly thereafter, he could not move his left arm, and he had reduced sensation in his left hand. He could not stand up because of the weakness in his left leg. However, his symptoms rapidly improved en route to the emergency department. On admission, his neck and left shoulder pain had nearly resolved, and he neither exhibited hemiparesis nor any sensory disturbance on neurological examination. We performed a brain computed tomography scan to exclude hemorrhagic stroke, which revealed no abnormalities. The patient and emergency medical personnel reported that he could move his face bilaterally at the scene. It was uncertain whether the patient had dysphagia and dysarthria or not. Therefore, we suspected either a lower brainstem lesion, such as TIA in the medial medulla caused by vertebral artery dissection, or a cervical spinal cord lesion, because the patient seemed to have hemiparesis sparing the face, which generally indicates a lesion below where the pyramidal tract gives off fibers Fig. 1. Sagittal view of cervical magnetic resonance imaging of a 67-year-old man with spontaneous cervical epidural hematoma. The images show a cervical epidural mass lesion at the C2–C6 levels that exhibited isointensity on T1-weighted imaging (A, red arrows) and hyperintensity on T2-weighted imaging (B, blue arrows).