{Reference Type}: Case Reports {Title}: Clinical Reasoning: A 24-Year-Old Woman With Penetrating Neck Injury From a Needlefish. {Author}: Wang AP;Hernandez ST;Kaderali Z;Heran N;Erdenebold UE;Fahed R;Walker GB; {Journal}: Neurology {Volume}: 102 {Issue}: 6 {Year}: 2024 Mar 26 {Factor}: 11.8 {DOI}: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000209225 {Abstract}: Evaluating patients with a traumatic spinal cord injury can be complicated by other injuries. In this case, a 24-year-old woman injured by a needlefish presented with combined motor and sensory defects, cranial nerve deficits, and a blunt vascular injury. This case highlights the importance of neurologic and vascular localizations and an understanding of spinal cord injuries involving various ascending and descending tracts. Appreciation of these anatomical considerations through this case illustrates the diagnostic approach to neurologic evaluation. While we present a traumatic etiology for multiple neurologic syndromes, this case gives readers an opportunity to develop a comprehensive differential diagnosis and tailor investigations for other relevant etiologies. Readers walking through this stepwise process will ultimately arrive at several distinct but related diagnoses.