Cervical intramedullary spinal cavernoma in setting of unresolved myelopathy: A case report

Surg Neurol Int. 2020 Jul 4:11:176. doi: 10.25259/SNI_87_2020. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Background: Spinal cavernous malformations are rare, accounting for approximately 5-12% of all spinal cord vascular lesions. Fortunately, improvements in imaging technologies have made it easier to establish the diagnosis of intramedullary spinal cavernomas (ISCs).

Case description: Here, we report the case of a 63-year-old male with an >11-year history of left-sided radiculopathy, ataxia, and quadriparesis. Initially, radiographic findings were interpreted as consistent with spondylotic myelopathy with cord signal changes from the C3-C7 levels. The patient underwent a C3-C7 laminectomy/foraminotomy with instrumentation. It was only after several symptomatic recurrences and repeated magnetic resonance images (MRI) that the diagnosis of a ventrally-located intramedullary lesion, concerning for a cavernoma, at the level C6 was established.

Conclusion: Early and repeated enhanced MR studies may be required to correctly establish the diagnosis and determine the optimal surgical management of ISCs.

Keywords: Cervical spine; Complex surgery; Diagnosis; Excision; Intramedullary spinal cavernoma; Laminectomy; Magnetic resonance; Myelotomy.

Publication types

  • Case Reports