Background and importance: Acute bilateral painless foot drop is a common symptom of various diagnoses and consider a red flag sign for a serious pathology in the central or peripheral nervous system including cerebral, spinal, and peripheral causes. Therefore, medical history and careful clinical examination are often used in the neurotopographic classification. Acute painless bilateral Foot drop (FD) is an uncommon initial manifestation of nerve root compression secondary to acute lumbar disc herniation not associated with low back pain and radiculopathy. In most patients with lumber disc herniation, FD is unilateral and is associated with low back pain and leg pain. Few cases have been described as bilateral FD, occurring simultaneously. Chronic bilateral foot drop as a sequela of systemic illnesses has been well-studied; however, acute painless bilateral foot drops not associated with radiculopathy or back pain in a healthy person should be immediately investigated, cauda equina syndrome is not necessarily to be associated with acute bilateral foot drop as shown in our case here. This study highlights the unusual presentation of lumber disc prolapse and illustrates the importance of palsy duration, early diagnosis, and time to surgery as predicting factors for improvement. The author presents bilateral acute foot drop case associated with lumbar discopathy without back pain, radiculopathy, or cauda equina symptoms as an unusual initial manifestation of lumbar discopathy. The current study aimed to provide insight on the lumbar acute painless etiology of bilateral FD in a patient without radiculopathy and back pain to prevent functional loss. Moreover, it emphasized the rare initial manifestations of lumbar disc prolapse and the importance of predictive factors of improvement such as palsy duration, early diagnosis, and time to surgery. To illustrate work-up for bilateral foot drop in acute setting presentation. A systematic review was conducted using PubMed and google scholar. Demographic and radiological data were obtained from a painless acute bilateral foot drop presented to our neurosurgery unit. We reviewed the patient demographics, clinical presentation, radiological parameters, surgical parameters, and time from presentation to surgery. In addition, preoperative, early postoperative, and most recent follow-up neurological examinations were compared. Our patient improved gradually after the surgery, on the first postoperative day, we obtained an MMT (Manual Muscle Test) Scoring < 3 on admission, and third day postoperative MMT Scoring of 3. After six weeks, the last follow-up had an MMT Score of 5 for both ankles.
Published in | International Journal of Neurosurgery (Volume 6, Issue 2) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15 |
Page(s) | 52-55 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Acute, Manual Muscle Test, Disc Prolapse, Bilateral Foot Drop, Neurotopographic Classification
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APA Style
Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan, Majed Saleh Alanazi, Amjad Abdulkader Ahmad Darwish, Abdulhafeez Osman Eltoum Mohamed, Salah Hani Sharif, et al. (2022). Lumber Disc Herniation - An Unusual Aetiology of Acute Painless Synchronous Foot Drop. International Journal of Neurosurgery, 6(2), 52-55. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15
ACS Style
Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan; Majed Saleh Alanazi; Amjad Abdulkader Ahmad Darwish; Abdulhafeez Osman Eltoum Mohamed; Salah Hani Sharif, et al. Lumber Disc Herniation - An Unusual Aetiology of Acute Painless Synchronous Foot Drop. Int. J. Neurosurg. 2022, 6(2), 52-55. doi: 10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15
AMA Style
Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan, Majed Saleh Alanazi, Amjad Abdulkader Ahmad Darwish, Abdulhafeez Osman Eltoum Mohamed, Salah Hani Sharif, et al. Lumber Disc Herniation - An Unusual Aetiology of Acute Painless Synchronous Foot Drop. Int J Neurosurg. 2022;6(2):52-55. doi: 10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15
@article{10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15, author = {Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan and Majed Saleh Alanazi and Amjad Abdulkader Ahmad Darwish and Abdulhafeez Osman Eltoum Mohamed and Salah Hani Sharif and Saggaf Alawi Assaggaf}, title = {Lumber Disc Herniation - An Unusual Aetiology of Acute Painless Synchronous Foot Drop}, journal = {International Journal of Neurosurgery}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {52-55}, doi = {10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijn.20220602.15}, abstract = {Background and importance: Acute bilateral painless foot drop is a common symptom of various diagnoses and consider a red flag sign for a serious pathology in the central or peripheral nervous system including cerebral, spinal, and peripheral causes. Therefore, medical history and careful clinical examination are often used in the neurotopographic classification. Acute painless bilateral Foot drop (FD) is an uncommon initial manifestation of nerve root compression secondary to acute lumbar disc herniation not associated with low back pain and radiculopathy. In most patients with lumber disc herniation, FD is unilateral and is associated with low back pain and leg pain. Few cases have been described as bilateral FD, occurring simultaneously. Chronic bilateral foot drop as a sequela of systemic illnesses has been well-studied; however, acute painless bilateral foot drops not associated with radiculopathy or back pain in a healthy person should be immediately investigated, cauda equina syndrome is not necessarily to be associated with acute bilateral foot drop as shown in our case here. This study highlights the unusual presentation of lumber disc prolapse and illustrates the importance of palsy duration, early diagnosis, and time to surgery as predicting factors for improvement. The author presents bilateral acute foot drop case associated with lumbar discopathy without back pain, radiculopathy, or cauda equina symptoms as an unusual initial manifestation of lumbar discopathy. The current study aimed to provide insight on the lumbar acute painless etiology of bilateral FD in a patient without radiculopathy and back pain to prevent functional loss. Moreover, it emphasized the rare initial manifestations of lumbar disc prolapse and the importance of predictive factors of improvement such as palsy duration, early diagnosis, and time to surgery. To illustrate work-up for bilateral foot drop in acute setting presentation. A systematic review was conducted using PubMed and google scholar. Demographic and radiological data were obtained from a painless acute bilateral foot drop presented to our neurosurgery unit. We reviewed the patient demographics, clinical presentation, radiological parameters, surgical parameters, and time from presentation to surgery. In addition, preoperative, early postoperative, and most recent follow-up neurological examinations were compared. Our patient improved gradually after the surgery, on the first postoperative day, we obtained an MMT (Manual Muscle Test) Scoring < 3 on admission, and third day postoperative MMT Scoring of 3. After six weeks, the last follow-up had an MMT Score of 5 for both ankles.}, year = {2022} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Lumber Disc Herniation - An Unusual Aetiology of Acute Painless Synchronous Foot Drop AU - Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan AU - Majed Saleh Alanazi AU - Amjad Abdulkader Ahmad Darwish AU - Abdulhafeez Osman Eltoum Mohamed AU - Salah Hani Sharif AU - Saggaf Alawi Assaggaf Y1 - 2022/09/29 PY - 2022 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15 DO - 10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15 T2 - International Journal of Neurosurgery JF - International Journal of Neurosurgery JO - International Journal of Neurosurgery SP - 52 EP - 55 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2640-1959 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijn.20220602.15 AB - Background and importance: Acute bilateral painless foot drop is a common symptom of various diagnoses and consider a red flag sign for a serious pathology in the central or peripheral nervous system including cerebral, spinal, and peripheral causes. Therefore, medical history and careful clinical examination are often used in the neurotopographic classification. Acute painless bilateral Foot drop (FD) is an uncommon initial manifestation of nerve root compression secondary to acute lumbar disc herniation not associated with low back pain and radiculopathy. In most patients with lumber disc herniation, FD is unilateral and is associated with low back pain and leg pain. Few cases have been described as bilateral FD, occurring simultaneously. Chronic bilateral foot drop as a sequela of systemic illnesses has been well-studied; however, acute painless bilateral foot drops not associated with radiculopathy or back pain in a healthy person should be immediately investigated, cauda equina syndrome is not necessarily to be associated with acute bilateral foot drop as shown in our case here. This study highlights the unusual presentation of lumber disc prolapse and illustrates the importance of palsy duration, early diagnosis, and time to surgery as predicting factors for improvement. The author presents bilateral acute foot drop case associated with lumbar discopathy without back pain, radiculopathy, or cauda equina symptoms as an unusual initial manifestation of lumbar discopathy. The current study aimed to provide insight on the lumbar acute painless etiology of bilateral FD in a patient without radiculopathy and back pain to prevent functional loss. Moreover, it emphasized the rare initial manifestations of lumbar disc prolapse and the importance of predictive factors of improvement such as palsy duration, early diagnosis, and time to surgery. To illustrate work-up for bilateral foot drop in acute setting presentation. A systematic review was conducted using PubMed and google scholar. Demographic and radiological data were obtained from a painless acute bilateral foot drop presented to our neurosurgery unit. We reviewed the patient demographics, clinical presentation, radiological parameters, surgical parameters, and time from presentation to surgery. In addition, preoperative, early postoperative, and most recent follow-up neurological examinations were compared. Our patient improved gradually after the surgery, on the first postoperative day, we obtained an MMT (Manual Muscle Test) Scoring < 3 on admission, and third day postoperative MMT Scoring of 3. After six weeks, the last follow-up had an MMT Score of 5 for both ankles. VL - 6 IS - 2 ER -