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Erschienen in: Intensive Care Medicine 4/2017

15.11.2016 | Imaging in Intensive Care Medicine

Bedside multimodal imaging of hemidiaphragm palsy after spinal cord injury

verfasst von: M. Pozzi, G. Bellani, A. Bronco, G. Citerio

Erschienen in: Intensive Care Medicine | Ausgabe 4/2017

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Excerpt

A 13-year-old boy was admitted to the neurocritical care unit with left-side hemiparesis due to a SCIWORA (spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormalities). A centromedullary C2–T1 spinal cord lesion was present at MRI as shown in the Electronic Supplementary Material (ESM). During the ICU stay, he developed respiratory insufficiency requiring non-invasive mechanical ventilation and a retrocardiac consolidation appeared on the chest X-ray (see the ESM). We used electrical impedance tomography (PulmoVista®, Dräger, Germany) to study the distribution of ventilation, clearly identifying an area of no tidal impedance variation in the dependent region of the left lung consistent with severe hypoventilation in the lower left lobe (Fig. 1a). On the basis of the anatomical distribution of the spinal lesions, left hemidiaphragm palsy was suspected. We incorporated surface electromyography of the right and left hemidiaphragms in the further diagnostic work-up. While organized electrical activity was detectable from the right hemidiaphragm, it was absent from the left side and thus consistent with hemidiaphragm denervation (Fig. 1b). Hemidiaphragmatic dysfunction was also confirmed by ultrasonography, showing a thinner left hemidiaphragm with no inspiratory thickening (see the ESM). Application of the latest-generation technology at the bedside, combined with multimodal imaging, provides clinicians with a straightforward and visual approach to the diagnosis of diaphragm dysfunction after spinal cord injury.
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Titel
Bedside multimodal imaging of hemidiaphragm palsy after spinal cord injury
verfasst von
M. Pozzi
G. Bellani
A. Bronco
G. Citerio
Publikationsdatum
15.11.2016
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Intensive Care Medicine / Ausgabe 4/2017
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-016-4618-7

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