Segmental neurofibromatosis—induced spinal cord compression

2001 ◽  
Vol 95 (2) ◽  
pp. 236-238
Author(s):  
Natarajan Muthukumar

✓ Spinal segmental neurofibromatosis (NF) is a rare entity. To date, patients in reported cases of segmental NF (or NF5) have harbored neurofibromas involving the peripheral nerves only. The author reports a rare case of segmental NF that caused spinal cord compression in a 40-year-old woman who presented with a 6-month history of intercostal neuralgia. Examination revealed mild lower-extremity weakness and dysesthesia in the right-sided T-9 dermatome. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed three neurofibromas involving the T-9 region, which were excised, and the patient's neuralgic pain was resolved postoperatively. Traditionally, it has been believed that segmental NF involved only the peripheral nerves. The present case illustrates that although rare, spinal cord compression can also occur in patients with segmental NF.

Neurosurgery ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 51 (5) ◽  
pp. 1275-1279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Alexander ◽  
Peter M. Grossi ◽  
Robert F. Spetzler ◽  
Cameron G. McDougall

Abstract OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE Spinal cord involvement in Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber (KTW) syndrome is rare. Cases of intradural spinal cord arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) have been associated with this syndrome. Likewise, cases of epidural hemangioma and angiomyolipoma have been reported to occur at the same segmental level as cutaneous hemangioma in KTW syndrome. This report details a rare case of an extradural thoracic AVM in a patient with KTW syndrome. CLINICAL PRESENTATION A 30-year-old man presented with a 10-month history of progressive myelopathy, bilateral lower-extremity weakness, and numbness, with the right side affected more than the left. His symptoms had progressed to the point that he was unable to walk. The patient had the characteristic manifestations of KTW syndrome, including numerous cutaneous angiomas and cavernomas, limb hypertrophy and syndactyly, and limb venous malformations. A magnetic resonance imaging scan and subsequent angiogram demonstrated a large extradural AVM causing cord compression at the T3–T4 levels. INTERVENTION The patient underwent two separate endovascular procedures, including embolization of upper thoracic and thyrocervical trunk feeders. Subsequently, he underwent T1–T4 laminectomy and microsurgical excision of the AVM. Clinically, the patient improved such that he could walk without assistance. CONCLUSION KTW syndrome represents a spectrum of clinical presentations. Although involvement of the spinal cord is uncommon, the manifestations of this syndrome may include both intradural and extradural AVMs in addition to various tumors.


Author(s):  
Tony El Murr

A 59 year old male with a past medical history of cholecystectomy and essential hypertension, presented to the emergency department with severe back pain, abdominal discomfort, poor appetite, generalized fatigue and progressive weight loss of 10 kgs over a three-month period. He has never been a smoker and drinks alcohol occasionally. He has no known allergies and no familial history of cancer. His current home medication includes beta blocker; angiotensin receptor blocker and low dose acetylsalicylic acid. His back pain started two months prior to presentation; it is not well localized to specific vertebra, not irradiating to lower limbs and sometimes related to weight lifting and cough. It is rarely exacerbated at night. His orthopedic surgeon attributed it to osteoarthritis since the patient used to practice hard manual work and weights lifting at his shop. He has been treated since that time with NSAIDs, muscle relaxant and opioids without complete analgesic response. At presentation, he had no fever, chills or night sweats. He had no urinary or sexual complaints that would suggest prostatic disease and was otherwise asymptomatic. The physical examination showed diffuse pain on lumbar vertebral percussion and abdominal tenderness in the right upper quadrant. He has no skin lesions and no palpable peripheral lymph nodes. His neurologic examination was also normal. On admission, significant laboratory findings showed hemoglobin 11.8 g/dl, platelets of 97,000 k/ul, white blood count 4,400 k/ul, ESR=40, creatinine 0.4 mg/dl,CRP 7.5 mg/L, lactate dehydrogenase 2256 U/L, alanine aminotransferase (ALAT) 70 U/L, gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) 1500 U/L, total bilirubin 2.32 mg/dl, and a creatine kinase (CK) 167 U/L. Prostatic specific antigen (PSA) was normal and equal to 1.17 ng/ml. Peripheral smear displayed normal pattern and thyroid tests were all within normal ranges. He was negative for salmonellosis, brucellosis and HIV. Tuberculin PPD test was negative as well. His chest X-ray was normal and abdominopelvic ultrasound showed only multiple liver nodules and mild prostate hypertrophy without ascites or significant abdominal lymph nodes. Lumbar MRI done one week before his admission revealed multiple vertebral lytic lesions without spinal cord compression. PET/CT done on the third day at hospital revealed a significant uptake of radiotracer by multiple small nodules in the right lung, in the liver and by multiple lymph nodes within the abdominal cavity. Moreover there were many lytic lesions in the dorsal and lumbar vertebrae. Surprisingly, the scan also showed focal, intense uptake of the prostate with a SUVmax of 8, 28 with evidence of seminal vesicles invasion. Both gastroscopy and colonoscopy was normal as well as his brain MRI. Ultrasound-guided liver nodules biopsies performed on the fifth day after stopping the acetylsalicylic acid revealed neuroendocrine small cell carcinoma as it showed immunohistochemical (IHC) positivity for synaptophysin and CD56. IHC was negative for TTF1 and PSA. Ultrasound-guided biopsy of the prostate was not performed for medical reasons as on his hospital day 7, the patient started feeling numbness and muscle weakness in his lower limbs more severe on the left side associated with urinary incontinence and revealing a spinal cord compression by secondary bone lesions. Regarding this rapidly progressive disease, high dose dexamethasone subcutaneous therapy and ten sessions of focused proton beam radiotherapy has been conducted on daily basis to release the spinal cord compression without significant improvement. Meanwhile, and based on liver biopsy findings, treatment by octreotide 100mg S/C twice daily was started, followed by chemotherapy with Carboplatin, Etoposide, and Atezolizumab (TECENTRIQ) 1200mg. Few days after, the patient developed severe prolonged pancytopenia requiring blood and platelets transfusions and treatment with double dose of granulocyte stimulating growth factor. His prolonged neutropenia was complicated by CMV colitis with unretractable diarrhea, bilateral pneumonia and pseudomonas aeroginosa septicemia. After one month of large spectrum antibiotics, antiviral and antifungal treatment, and while he was still neutropenic, bone marrow biopsy revealed severe infiltration by neuroendocrine small cell carcinoma. The patient was still deteriorating clinically and showing further weight and appetite loss, total muscle weakness and asthenia. At this point, he was no longer a candidate for chemotherapy but only symptomatic treatment was maintained. He died 45 days after his admission.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Nedal Bukhari ◽  
Bachar Harfouch ◽  
Majid Shallal Alotaibi ◽  
Hulayel Al-Harbi ◽  
Omar Chamdine

We report a case of a 31-year-old female patient with high-risk neuroblastoma (NBL) who presented with a history of static back pain and bilateral lower limb weakness for almost a month. Her primary tumor was located in the right paraspinal region, causing spinal cord compression (SCC). Chemotherapy was administered with an immediate clinical improvement noted after 24 hours of starting treatment. We herein report the efficacy of chemotherapy in an adult neuroblastoma (aNBL) patient presenting with spinal cord compression.


2005 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 491-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Jalbert ◽  
Patrick Chaynes ◽  
Jacques Lagarrigue

✓ Extramedullary hematopoiesis (EMH) is a compensatory mechanism occurring in patients with chronic anemia, which occurs most frequently with thalassemia. The authors report the case of a 57-year-old man, with no history of clinical or hematological disease, presenting with spinal cord compression. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging demonstrated a homogeneous posterior epidural mass extending from T-3 to T-6. Following decompressive surgery, the patient's symptoms improved. Histological analysis showed features consistent with a diagnosis of EMH. Subsequent workup was remarkable for an asymptomatic spherocytosis without anemia. There was no family history of anemia. An EMH-related presentation of mild spherocytosis has been described in the literature, but its epidural location led to spinal cord compression. The MR imaging features were suggestive of EMH, but in the presence of spinal cord compression and in the absence of a history of chronic anemia, the authors did not believe that nonsurgical management would have been reasonable.


1981 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 542-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Tahmouresie ◽  
Peter M. Farmer ◽  
Norman Stokes

✓ A patient with thoracolumbar paraspinal muscle myxoma with spinal cord compression presented with a long history of back pain and recent paraparesis. Removal of the tumor and decompression of the spinal cord provided marked improvement of the weakness.


1983 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 847-853 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean A. O'Laoire ◽  
David G. T. Thomas

✓ Twenty-six patients who presented with spinal cord compression due to cervical disc prolapse (herniation of the nucleus pulposus) were treated by anterior discectomy. There was a high incidence of disc prolapse at the C3–4 level. The most severe degrees of preoperative disability were associated with prolapse at that level. Impairment of posterior column function, particularly in the upper limbs, played a major part in producing disability. High cervical disc prolapse can produce a clinical picture that is predominantly like that of a posterior cord syndrome. Preexisting fusion of vertebral bodies in the cervical spine and a history of cervical spinal trauma appear to be predisposing factors. Discectomy is an effective treatment of this condition. Spinal cord compression due to cervical disc prolapse should be distinguished from spondylotic myelopathy.


1975 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 483-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdel A. Ammoumi ◽  
Joanna H. Sher ◽  
Daniel Schmelka

✓ The authors report a patient with sickle cell anemia who suffered from paraplegia of 18 months duration due to spinal cord compression by a hemopoietic mass. Recovery following removal of the mass was complete.


1995 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
David G. Porter ◽  
Andrew J. Martin ◽  
Conor L. Mallucci ◽  
Catherine N. Makunura ◽  
H. Ian Sabin

✓ The authors present the case of spinal cord compression in a 16-year-old boy due to the rare vascular lesion, Masson's vegetant hemangioendothelioma.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. E620-E622 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Taghva ◽  
Khan W. Li ◽  
John C. Liu ◽  
Ziya L. Gokaslan ◽  
Patrick C. Hsieh

Abstract OBJECTIVE Metastatic epidural spinal cord compression is a potentially devastating complication of cancer and is estimated to occur in 5% to 14% of all cancer patients. It is best treated surgically. Minimally invasive spine surgery has the potential benefits of decreased surgical approach–related morbidity, blood loss, hospital stay, and time to mobilization. CLINICAL PRESENTATION A 36-year-old man presented with worsening back pain and lower extremity weakness. Workup revealed metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung with spinal cord compression at T4 and T5. INTERVENTION AND TECHNIQUE T4 and T5 vertebrectomy with expandable cage placement and T1–T8 pedicle screw fixation and fusion were performed using minimally invasive surgical techniques. RESULT The patient improved neurologically and was ambulatory on postoperative day 1. At the 9-month follow-up point, he remained neurologically intact and pain free, and there was no evidence of hardware failure. CONCLUSION Minimally invasive surgical circumferential decompression may be a viable option for the treatment of metastatic epidural spinal cord compression.


2005 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 302-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher B. Shields ◽  
Y. Ping Zhang ◽  
Lisa B. E. Shields ◽  
Yingchun Han ◽  
Darlene A. Burke ◽  
...  

Object. There are no clinically based guidelines to direct the spine surgeon as to the proper timing to undertake decompression after spinal cord injury (SCI) in patients with concomitant stenosis-induced cord compression. The following three factors affect the prognosis: 1) severity of SCI; 2) degree of extrinsic spinal cord compression; and 3) duration of spinal cord compression. Methods. To elucidate further the relationship between varying degrees of spinal stenosis and a mild contusion-induced SCI (6.25 g-cm), a rat SCI/stenosis model was developed in which 1.13- and 1.24-mm-thick spacers were placed at T-10 to create 38 and 43% spinal stenosis, respectively. Spinal cord damage was observed after the stenosis—SCI that was directly proportional to the duration of spinal cord compression. The therapeutic window prior to decompression was 6 and 12 hours in the 43 and 38% stenosis—SCI lesions, respectively, to maintain locomotor activity. A significant difference in total lesion volume was observed between the 2-hour and the delayed time(s) to decompression (38% stenosis—SCI, 12 and 24 hours, p < 0.05; 43% stenosis—SCI, 24 hours, p < 0.05) indicating a more favorable neurological outcome when earlier decompression is undertaken. This finding was further supported by the animal's ability to support weight when decompression was performed by 6 or 12 hours compared with 24 hours after SCI. Conclusions. Analysis of the findings in this study suggests that early decompression in the rat improves locomotor function. Prolongation of the time to decompression may result in irreversible damage that prevents locomotor recovery.


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