Acute Spinal Cord Infarction with Preferential Involvement of Ventral Gray Matter: An Autopsy Report.

2020 
Herein, we report abdominal aortic thrombosis as a rare cause of acute spinal cord infarction. A 78-year-old man with multiple vascular risk factors developed acute paraplegia with sensory and urinary disturbances and signs of ischemia in both lower limbs. The post-mortem study done 3 days after the onset of symptoms revealed a large coagulum in the abdominal aorta, distal to the renal arteries and extending to bilateral common iliac arteries; in addition, marked atherosclerosis was present in most large blood vessels. Premature incomplete necrotic foci were seen in the ventral gray matter of the spinal cord from T6 through S5; the surrounding white matter and dorsal gray matter were spared. Considering our autopsy case, spinal cord gray matter may be more vulnerable to ischemia than the white matter.
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