Aggressive Thoracic Hemangioma of Spine Presenting as Painful Adolescent Scoliosis - Diagnosis and Management

J Orthop Case Rep. 2022 Nov;12(11):95-99. doi: 10.13107/jocr.2022.v12.i11.3430.

Abstract

Introduction: Spinal hemangioma is the most common benign lesion of the spine with an incidence of 10-12%. Aggressive hemangioma presents with back pain, deformity, or neurologic deficit. Aggressive hemangioma presenting as painful scoliosis is very rare and literature reporting them is very limited.

Case report: We present the case of a boy in his second decade who presented with back pain for 1 month radiating to his right chest with a deformity in his back. MRI showed a hyperintense lesion involving the sixth dorsal vertebra in the T2-weighted image and a hypointense lesion with striations in STIR images suggestive of hemangioma. Pre-operative embolization was done using micro platinum coils. The patient underwent a decompressive laminectomy and vertebral body decompression. The patient also underwent 12 cycles of radiotherapy. The patient had complete resolution of the deformity without any recurrence at 2 years.

Conclusion: Management of aggressive hemangiomas with neurologic deficit needs a multidisciplinary approach with surgery, pre-operative embolization, and post-operative radiotherapy.

Keywords: Adolescent scoliosis; embolization; laminectomy; scoliosis; spinal hemangioma.

Publication types

  • Case Reports