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Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Early diagnosis is imperative
RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT
- In patients with mild weakness and urinary hesitancy, especially if history of cancer, have high index of suspicion
Symptoms and signs
- Acute (usually symmetrical) weakness of arms or legs or both
- weakness of the arms only is rare but apparently normal strength in the legs does not rule out spinal cord compression
- Sensory level
- may be absent or at least difficult to pick up in high cervical spine compression
- Hyperreflexia and extensor plantar responses
- because of spinal shock these may not be present at outset
- Bowel/bladder dysfunction
- Erectile dysfunction in males
- Local spinal pain and/or tenderness +/- radicular pain
- In patient with diagnosed cancer, certain symptoms strongly suggest spinal metastases:
- cervical or thoracic pain
- progressive or unremitting severe lumbar pain
- nocturnal spinal pain preventing sleep
Examination
- Full neurological examination with clear documentation on ASIA chart
- if device linked to a printer, print off electronic copy of ASIA chart
- Upper and lower limb strength and reflexes
- Sensory examination of upper and lower limbs and perineum
Investigations
- Refer such patients IMMEDIATELY to a spinal specialist
- do not delay referral until a scan has been done
- If spinal cord compression suspected, request immediate MRI scan of whole spine
- if MRI scan required out-of-hours. See Imaging: Who2Call guideline
- FBC, U&E, LFT, ESR, CRP, Bone profile including albumin and calcium levels, clotting profile
- If infection suspected, blood cultures. See Collection of blood culture specimens guideline
- Chest X-ray
- If malignant cause of cord compression suspected from MRI scan:
- CT head/chest/abdomen/pelvis
Differential diagnosis
- First exclude spinal cord compression
- Transverse myelitis
- Cord ischaemia
- Guillain-Barré syndrome
- Intrinsic spinal cord lesion such as intramedullary tumour
- Intracranial lesion
IMMEDIATE TREATMENT
- If malignancy suspected or proven, refer immediately to musculoskeletal cancer team
- Optimise spinal cord perfusion by treating hypovolaemic or neurogenic shock
- ideally keeping MAP ≥75-80 mmHg
- Both because of potential for spinal instability, and to optimise cord perfusion, ensure patient is nursed flat
- with turns side-to-side for pressure area care
- Catheterise the bladder. See Urethral catheterisation guideline
- If symptoms and signs suggest high cervical spinal cord compression, be aware of potential for respiratory failure
Dexamethasone in malignant spinal cord compression (MSCC)
Do not use Dexamethasone if confirmed or suspected lymphoma - discuss with haematology and spinal surgeon
- Once MRI scan performed and infective cause excluded, and after discussion with on-call spinal surgery team, give dexamethasone sodium phosphate 6.6-10 mg (Hameln brand) IV or 16 mg oral immediately
- then 8 mg oral or 6.6 mg IV twice daily at breakfast and lunchtime
- with concomitant administration of a PPI (e.g. omeprazole or lansoprazole)
- if oral route inappropriate, continue dexamethasone 6.6 mg IV twice daily at breakfast and lunchtime
- Review need for dexamethasone at 48 hr
- If patient requires surgery +/- radiotherapy, review dose
Thromboprophylaxis
- TEDS, Flowtron
- No anticoagulation for the first 24 hours until a decision regarding surgery is made
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
- If surgery not indicated, and patient has cancer, refer immediately to oncology team
- share treatment decisions with oncology, but this need not delay urgent surgery
- Further management will be decided by spinal team or oncology team, as patients may receive radiotherapy after or as an alternative to surgery