BMC Emergency Medicine (Aug 2010)

Confusion after spine injury: cerebral fat embolism after traumatic rupture of a Tarlov cyst: Case report

  • Duja Corina M,
  • Berna Christophe,
  • Kremer Stéphane,
  • Géronimus Claude,
  • Kopferschmitt Jacques,
  • Bilbault Pascal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-227X-10-18
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. 18

Abstract

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Abstract Background Acute low back pain is a very common symptom and reason for many medical consultations. In some unusual circumstances it could be linked to a rare aetiology. Case presentation We report a 70-year-old man with an 8-month history of left posterior thigh and leg pain who had sudden confusion after a fall from standing. It was due to cerebral fat embolism suspected by computed tomography scan, later confirmed by brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A spinal MRI scan was then performed and revealed a sacral fracture which drained into an unknown perineurial cyst (Tarlov cyst). Under medical observation the patient fully recovered within three weeks. Conclusions Sacral perineurial cysts are rare, however they remain a potential cause of lumbosacral radiculopathy.