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Thomas jefferson university

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Faculty Papers

2011

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Neurologic Improvement After Thoracic, Thoracolumbar, And Lumbar Spinal Cord (Conus Medullaris) Injuries, James S. Harrop, Md, Swetha Naroji, Mitchell G. Maltenfort, Phd, John K. Ratliff, Md, Stavropoula L. Tjoumakaris, Brian Frank, D. Greg Anderson, M.D., Todd Albert, Md, Alexander R. Vaccaro, Md, Phd Jan 2011

Neurologic Improvement After Thoracic, Thoracolumbar, And Lumbar Spinal Cord (Conus Medullaris) Injuries, James S. Harrop, Md, Swetha Naroji, Mitchell G. Maltenfort, Phd, John K. Ratliff, Md, Stavropoula L. Tjoumakaris, Brian Frank, D. Greg Anderson, M.D., Todd Albert, Md, Alexander R. Vaccaro, Md, Phd

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Faculty Papers

Study Design. Retrospective. Objective. With approximately 10,000 new spinal cord injury (SCI) patients in the United States each year, predicting public health outcomes is an important public health concern. Combining all regions of the spine in SCI trials may be misleading if the lumbar and sacral regions (conus) have a neurologic improvement at different rates than the thoracic or thoracolumbar spinal cord.

Summary of Background Data. Over a 10-year period between January 1995 to 2005, 1746 consecutive spinal injured patients were seen, evaluated, and treated through a level 1 trauma referral center. A retrospective analysis was performed on 150 patients …