Spine trauma: Difference between revisions

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= Pathophysiology =
= Pathophysiology =
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!Injury Phase
!Injury Phase
!Time Relative to Primary Injury
!Time Relative to Primary Injury

Revision as of 13:21, 3 February 2024

Pathophysiology

Injury Phase Time Relative to Primary Injury Key Processes and Events
Immediate <2 hours
  • Primary mechanical injury (severing of axons)
  • Gray matter hemorrhage and ischemia
  • Microglial activation
  • Release of pro-inflammatory factors (IL-1β, TNFα, IL-6)
Early acute <48 hours
  • Vasogenic and cytotoxic edema
  • ROS production, lipid peroxidation
  • Glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity
  • Continued hemorrhage, ischemia, and necrosis
  • Neutrophil invasion
  • Peak BSCB permeability
  • Early demyelination (oligodendrocyte death)
  • Neuronal death
  • Axonal swelling
  • Systemic events (systemic shock, spinal shock, hypotension, hypoxia)
Subacute <14 days
  • Macrophage infiltration
  • Initiation of astroglial scar (reactive astrogliosis)
  • BSCB repair and resolution of edema
Intermediate <6 months
  • Continued formation of glial scar
  • Cyst formation
  • Lesion stabilization
Chronic >6 months
  • Prolonged Wallerian degeneration
  • Persistence of spared, demyelinated axons
  • Potential structural and functional plasticity of spared spinal cord tissue


| Injury Phase | Time Relative to Primary Injury | Key Processes and Events | | --- | --- | --- | | Immediate | <2 hours || | Early acute | <48 hours |

- Vasogenic and cytotoxic edema - ROS production, lipid peroxidation - Glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity - Continued hemorrhage, ischemia, and necrosis - Neutrophil invasion - Peak BSCB permeability - Early demyelination (oligodendrocyte death) - Neuronal death - Axonal swelling - Systemic events (systemic shock, spinal shock, hypotension, hypoxia)

|

| Subacute | <14 days |

- Macrophage infiltration - Initiation of astroglial scar (reactive astrogliosis) - BSCB repair and resolution of edema

|

| Intermediate | <6 months |

- Continued formation of glial scar - Cyst formation - Lesion stabilization

|

| Chronic | >6 months |

- Prolonged Wallerian degeneration - Persistence of spared, demyelinated axons - Potential structural and functional plasticity of spared spinal cord tissue

|