What’s the prognosis for spinal cord cavernous disease?

Spinal Cord Cavitation has a mostly poor prognosis and requires aggressive treatment. Spinal cord cavernous disease is a chronic progressive disease of the spinal cord. The lesions are mostly located in the cervical cord and may involve the medulla oblongata. Medullary cavernous disease may occur alone or in conjunction with spinal cord cavernous disease. The cause of the disease is unclear. Typical clinical manifestations are segmental dissociative sensory deficits, muscle atrophy and trophic deficits in the innervated area of the diseased segment. The progression of spinal cord cavernous disease is slow and often lasts for decades. Currently there is no effective treatment. The prognosis is not good. The cause of the disease is not clear, and it is not possible to treat the cause of the disease, so the treatment effect is not good. Treatment mostly improves the symptoms, and although there is some effect, it is not a complete cure. If a patient is diagnosed with spinal cord cavernous disease, it is recommended that active treatment be carried out under the guidance of a professional doctor to avoid delays.