Progression and Outcome of Patients in a Canadian Dementia
Clinic
David B Hogan, Daniel E Thierer, Erika M Ebly and Irma M
Parhad

Abstract:
We studied the electrophysiological changes occurring
in six patients with tethered cord syndrome. Evidence of spinal
malformations was provided by magnetic resonance imaging. The
functional assessment of the spinal cord was performed by analysing
both spinal and cortical somatosensory evoked potentials. The
evoked electrospinogram was recorded from the thoracic and lumbosacral
spinous processes. The N22 lumbosacral potential was selectively
affected, being rostrocaudally displaced and reduced in amplitude
or even absent in patients with neurological signs indicating
a segmental lower cord lesion. Inter-peak somatosensory evoked
potentials latency was normal in all cases, suggesting that
ascending axonal potentials in the dorsal column fibres may
be synchronized. Segmental potentials of the lumbosacral response,
originating from the post-synaptic activity of dorsal horn interneurons,
are selectively affected in this syndrome resulting from the
rostrocaudal displacement of the spinal cord due to tethering.
Our findings in the clinical field are consistent with previous
experimental evidence indicating a different sensitivity of
the gray vs. white matter to progressive stretching.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1994; 21: 325-330
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