Thoracic Spinal Epidural Hematoma

A Thoracic Spinal Epidural Hematoma (TSEH) is a rare condition involving blood accumulation in the epidural space of the thoracic spine, which may compress the spinal cord and cause acute neurological deficits.

A collection of blood between the dura mater and the vertebral wall in the thoracic spinal canal.

  • Incidence: ~0.1 per 100,000/year (all SEH); thoracic less common.
  • Age: More frequent in adults >40 years.
  • Gender: Slight male predominance.
  • Spontaneous Thoracic Spinal Epidural Hematoma (idiopathic, coagulopathy, vascular malformations)
  • Traumatic (even minor trauma or spinal manipulation)
  • Iatrogenic (epidural injection, lumbar puncture)
  • Neoplastic or infectious (rare)
  • Acute thoracic back pain
  • Motor deficits: paraparesis or paraplegia
  • Sensory level loss
  • Sphincter dysfunction
  • May mimic:
    • Aortic dissection
    • Stroke
    • Transverse myelitis
  • MRI spine with contrast: gold standard
    • Identifies epidural blood compressing spinal cord
  • CT: less sensitive; useful for bony abnormalities
  • Spinal angiography: if vascular lesion suspected
  • Urgent surgical decompression (laminectomy)
    • Especially if deficits are severe or worsening
  • Conservative management:
    • Only in stable or improving patients
  • Correct coagulation disorders
  • Best outcomes if surgery within 12 hours
  • Prognosis depends on pre-op neurological status and delay to treatment
  • Acute thoracic back pain + neurological signs = emergency MRI
  • Delay in diagnosis/treatment β†’ permanent damage
  • Early decompression = key to neurological recovery
  • thoracic_spinal_epidural_hematoma.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/05/23 19:05
  • by administrador