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Spinal Cord

Anatomy and Neuroimaging


RITE Exam Review Lecture
Erik Beltran, MD MS
01/12/2015

Lecture Outline

Basic Anatomy
Embryology
Vascular Supply
Grey Matter
White Matter
Clinical Cases & Neuroimaging

Spinal Cord
The Basics

40-50 cm in length
1 1.5 cm in diameter
31 paired roots
Ends at the L1-L2 as the
conus medullaris
Cauda equina continues as
collection of lumbosacral
nerves
Filum terminale
C1-C7= Above vertebrae
C8 & below= Below vertebrae

Spinal Cord
Embryology

Formed from the caudal third of the neural tube w/


neuralization beginning day 17
Caudal neuropore closes by day 27
Alar Plate- Dorsal horns, afferent function
Basal Plate- Ventral & lateral horns, efferent function &
ventral roots

Spinal Cord
Embryology

Growth increases during the 3rd embryonic month


Vertebral column and spinal cord initially grow at the same
rate
After 3rd month, spinal cord growth rate slows compared to
body and vertebral column
Net result- Cord ends at L1-L2, but nerve roots still exit at
corresponding vertebrae

Spinal Cord
Meninges

Cord is covered by the meninges


Dura matter- Tough outer
covering, dural sac ends at S2.
Arachnoid
Pia- Remains closely adherent to
the spinal cord. Filum terminale
anchors the cord to the coccyx
Spinal cord is attached to the
dura by a series of lateral
denticulate ligaments

What are the layers traversed when performing a


lumbar puncture?

-Skin
-Subcutaneous Fat
-Supraspinous ligament
-Intraspinous ligament
-Ligamentum flavum
-Epidural fat
-Dura
-Arachnoid

Spinal Cord
Blood supply

One anterior spinal artery


Supplies anterior 2/3 of the spinal cord
Arises from the vertebral arteries in the cervical region and from 510 larger radicular arteries (off aorta) in the lower cord

Spinal Cord
Blood Supply

Two posterior spinal arteries


Supply the posterior 1/3 of the spinal cord
Arise from smaller radicular arteries at each level
Largest radicular artery is the artery of Ademkiewicz

Spinal Cord
Grey Matter

Spinal Cord

Grey Matter Rexed lamina

Defined by cellular
structure & location
I-VI Dorsal horn
VII & X - Intermediate
zone
VIII & IX Ventral
horn

Spinal Cord

Grey Matter Rexed lamina I - V

Lamina I (marginal nucleus of the spinal cord)


Lamina II (substantia gelatinosa)
Lamina III - V (nucleus proprius)
Found at all cord levels
Receive information from Lissauers tract (contains
ipsilateral pain and tempurature afferents, which
ascend 1-2 segments, then synapse

Spinal Cord

Grey matter - Rexed Lamina VI

Lamina VI (Nucleus dorsalis/ Clarks nucleus)


Extends from C8 T3/T4
Major relay center for unconscious proprioception
Receives information from muscle spindle and golgi tendon
organs and projects to the cerebellum via the dorsal
spinocerebellar tract

Spinal Cord

Grey matter - Rexed Lamina VII

Lamina VII (Intermediolateral nucleus & sacral


parasympathetic cell bodies)
Extends from T1 L2
Cell bodies of 1st order sympathetic neurons
Sacral parasympathetic cell bodies: S2 S4

Spinal Cord
Grey matter

Lamina X Anterior white commissure & central canal


Lamina VIII - Contains primarily interneurons

Spinal Cord

Grey Matter Rexed Lamina IX

Contains mainly motor neurons


Alpha motor neurons innervate a single motor unit
Dorsal motor neurons tend to innervate flexor muscles compared to
extensors, which tend to be more ventral
Gamma and beta motor neurons innervate muscle spindles
Cell bodies of the phrenic nerve (C3-C5)
Spinal accessory nucleus (C1-C6)
Onufs nucleus (S2-S4) Motor neurons that are associated with
urethral and anal sphincters. Contribute to maintenance of
micturation and defecation continence.

Spinal Cord

Summary of grey matter

Substantia gelatinosa Relay center for spinothalamic tracts


Nucleus dorsalis Relay center for proprioception
Intermediolateral nuclei Sympathetic neurons
Motor neurons Innervate motor units

Spinal Cord

White matter Ascending & Descending pathways

Spinal Cord

White matter Ascending pathways

Dorsal columns
Spinothalamic tract
Spinocerebellar tracts

Spinal Cord

White matter Ascending pathways


Dorsal Columns

Somatotropically organized, medial to lateral:

Sacral, Lumbar, thoracic, cervical.

Comprised of 1st order afferent axons containing well


localized fine touch and conscious proprioceptive
information.
Remain ipsilateral throughout spinal cord.
Synapse in nucl gracilis & cuneatus in the medulla.

Spinal Cord

White matter Ascending pathways


Anterolateral System

Lateral spinothalamic tract

Contains contralateral pain and temperature information.


2nd order neurons that have arisen from the posterior grey
matter (substantia gelatinosa, etc) and cross via anterior
commissure.
Medial to Lateral: C/T/L/S
Destination: mainly thalamus (VPL)

Also:

Spinoreticular system (arousal to painful stimuli)


Spinotectal system (orient head & eyes to painful stimuli)

Spinal Cord

White matter Ascending pathways


Spinocerebellar Tracts
Division

From (peripheral
process)

Region

Dorsal spinocerebellar

Muscle spindles
(primary)

Ipsilateral trunk and legs

Ventral spinocerebellar

Gogli tendon organs

Ipsilateral trunk and legs

Cuneocerebellar

Muscle spindle
(primary)

Ipsilateral arm

Rostral spinocerebellar

Golgi tendon organs

Ipsilateral arm

Spinal Cord

White matter Descending pathways


Lateral and anterior corticospinal tracts

Motor pathways

Anterior corticospinal tract:

~ 10 % of descending motor axons, primarily truncal


muscles.
Ends by mid-thoracic cord.
Ipsilateral until axons cross to anterior horn at the level
of the synapse.

Lateral corticospinal tract:

~ 90% of descending motor axons.


Contains contralateral axons.

Spinal Cord

White matter Descending pathways


Rubrospinal Tract

Contributes to control of large muscle movements in the


arms
Primarily modulates flexion movements of arms
Lesions above the Red Nucleus lead to decorticate
posturing

Disinhibition of rubrospinal tract with disruption of lateral


corticospinal tracts = Flexion of upper extremities.
Decerebrate posturing results from a lesion below the red
nucleus.

Spinal Cord

White matter Descending pathways


Vestibulospinal & Tectospinal Tracts

Vestibulospinal:

Alters muscle tone, position of limbs and posture in response to


movements of the head and body.
Medial tract acts to stabilize head and neck.
Lateral tract acts to stabilize extensors of the legs.

Tectospinal:

Mediates reflex postural movements of the head & neck in response


to Visual & Auditory stimuli

Spinal Cord Cases

A 34 year-old male is stabbed in the back after telling a


friend he was going to vote for Trump.
Your careful neurologic exam reveals:

Right leg weakness with right extensor plantar response.


Loss of vibration and proprioception at the right toe and
ankle.
Loss of pain and temp of the left leg and left torso to T6.
Where is the lesion?

Brown-sequard syndrome

Spastic/weak leg w/ impaired


joint position sense, & loss of
contralateral pain/temp 2-3
segments below spinal lesion

58 yo male with cardiac disease undergoes repair of abdominal


aortic aneurysm.
8 hours later, he wakes up with no movement of his legs, the
cardiothoracic surgeons swear it wasnt them..
After obtaining a CT of the head, the primary team activates the
stroke pager
Your neurologic exam finds:

Paraplegia, hypotonia, areflexia at patella/achilles, absent pain &


temp to T11-T12, w/ preserved vibration and proprioception.
Where is the likely lesion and from what pathologic process?
Why did you find hypotonia and areflexia?

Anterior Spinal Artery Occlusion

Anterior Cord syndrome.

Lesion most likely due to insufficient arterial flow to the


anterior spinal cord at the artery of Adamkiewicz.

Loss of reflexes and low tone are commonly seen due to


spinal shock in an acute injury.

Reflexes may not return for days to weeks.


Eventual development of spasticity and hyperreflexia.

28 yo female presents to your clinic with severe


headaches exacerbated by sneezing, coughing, bending
over or defecation.
Your careful neurologic exam notes diminished pain and
temperature over the bilateral C4 and C5 dermatomes
What is the pathologic process?

Central Cord Syndrome

Syringomyelia and
Chiari malformation.
Loss of pain / temp in a
cape-like distribution.
Preserved vibration /
posterior column
sensation and motor
systems until late in
disease course.

45 yo male presents with low back pain, urinary retention, lower


extremity weakness.
Your careful neurologic exam notes saddle anesthesia, brisk
patellar reflexes, increased tone in lower extremities, 4/5 strength
in lower extremities, increased anal sphincter tone.
Likely localization and cause?

Conus medullaris syndrome (lesion at L1-L2) from a


ruptured lumbar disc.

Numbness and weakness tend to be symmetric.


Mixture of upper and lower motor neuron signs.
Urinary retention, erectile dysfunction, constipation (increased
anal sphincter tone).

Cauda equina syndrome

More likely to be asymmetric


Only lower motor neuron signs.
Low anal sphincter tone and low urethral tone lead to early
urine and fecal incontinence.

56 year-old male reports weakness of right arm for 6 months,


followed by weakness of right leg for 3 months.
Neurologic exam notes 4/5 strength throughout RUE, 4+/5
strength in RLE, with right sided hyperreflexia, atrophy and
fasciculations.

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis


Hallmark: Weakness & Wasting in the setting of
preserved or brisk reflexes.
Important to note that while fasciculations derive from
LMN, they are not necessarily pathologic when seen in
isolation.

Spinal Cord Neuroimaging

Spondylolysis

Spondylolisthesis

Cervical disc herniation

Cord contusion is the best response because there is gross traumatic injury to the
spinal column with disruption of the C4-C5 ligamenta flava, interspinous ligaments,
and posterior longitudinal ligament. There is fracture deformity of C5 vertebra
consistent with a flexion teardrop fracture and fracture of C6. There is prevertebral
soft tissue edema, and the cord has T2 hyperintense signal at the C5 and C6 level
consistent with traumatic cord contusion with some intramedullary hemorrhagic
component. Neuromyelitis optica, ependymoma, abscess, and sarcoid myelitis are not
the best choices because the extensive vertebral column injuries are not consistent with
the typical presentation of any of these entities.

Spondylodiscitis with epidural abscess

The spinal lesion is multisegmental, elongated, and is in the lower cervical and thoracic levels.
The pattern and extent of this lesion is atypical for multiple sclerosis in its size and extent and
most characteristic of a form of transverse myelitis. The presence anti aquaporin antibodies (NMO
antibodies) is a diagnostic marker of neuromyelitis optica (also known as Devic disease) which is
a distinct form of demyelinating disease. The other choices would be highly unlikely to have these
auto-antibodies.

The arrows on the two images point to a semilunar nodule along the right anterior margin of
the right facet joint. This structure results in right lateral recess stenosis and is a frequent
etiology of radicular pain in the elderly. This structure arises continuous with the right facet
joint and is typical of a synovial cyst, likely partially calcified. A neurofibroma would be more
likely seen within the right neuroforamen arising along the nerve root. A large free fragment
with that dimension and that location is unlikely. The structure is adjacent to, but does not
appear to be continuous with the adjacent disc.

The figures demonstrate a diffuse heterogeneous appearance of the vertebrae, "salt and
pepper pattern". There is also a larger focal enhancing lesion extending into the pedicle
of L2 along with compression fractures. This pattern of diffuse osseus invasion can be
seen due to hematologic diseases and is most typical of multiple myeloma. Thalassemia
is associated with marrow reconversion with the repopulating of yellow marrow by
hematopoietic cells, but that would not be expected to show this salt and pepper pattern
or a focal lesion as in L2, nor would metastatic carcinoma. There are pathologic
compression fractures and some kyphotic posturing, but these would not be the best
answers.

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