Neurobehavioral and magnetic resonance imaging findings in two cases of decompression sickness

1989 
: Two divers underwent neurobehavioral examinations and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) while hospitalized during the first 2 weeks after sustaining decompression sickness (DCS). Their neurologic findings included a Brown-Sequard Syndrome consistent with spinal cord lesion, and focal deficits consistent with cerebral lesion(s). MRI revealed subcortical white matter lesions in the brains of both divers, whereas no lesion of the spinal cord was demonstrated. The patients exhibited neurobehavioral sequelae including disturbances of memory, divergent thinking, and visuospatial and motor functioning. Focal neurologic deficits resolved in both patients, and their cognitive and memory problems improved slowly. Findings in these two divers raise the possibility that cerebral insult more frequently accompanies spinal cord injury in DCS than previously thought.
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