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Cervical Spinal Cord Ganglioglioma

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So, the top four neoplasms that affect the spinal

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cord would be astrocytoma, number one,

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followed by ependymoma in children,

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ependymoma followed by astrocytoma in adults,

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followed by hemangioblastomas and metastases.

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Now, we're going to get into the more unusual

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neoplasms affecting the spinal cord.

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Here is a patient who is 20 years old and had

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been treated for scoliosis and you'll notice that

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he's had rods placed to correct that thoracic scoliosis.

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He was only evaluated with plane films for

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presumed benign scoliosis.

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However, when we look at the cervical spine

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region on the MRI scan,

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we see that there is a mass in

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the cervical spinal cord.

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As we look at it on the sagittal scan,

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you see that indeed this is intramedullary

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intradural lesion with narrowing of the CSF space,

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as one would expect from an intradural intramedullary

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lesion, and then returning to more normal signal

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intensity and width of the CSF.

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However, this is going in and out of plane

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because of the patient's cervical spinal cord...

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cervical spinal canal scoliosis.

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On the post-gadolinium-enhanced scan,

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we see irregular contrast enhancement of this mass,

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which is relatively well-defined.

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So this is one of the more unusual of

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the neoplasms of the spinal cord.

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And this is a cord ganglioglioma.

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This is a low grade neoplasm, more typically

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found at the conus medullaris,

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that is at the bottom of the spinal cord, but in this case,

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a cervical spine one which was found after the

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patient had been previously treated for

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their "benign scoliosis."

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So this is the fifth of the neoplasms I wanted

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to describe in the spinal cord.

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And now we'll go on to the final neoplasm.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Spine

Neuroradiology

Neoplastic

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

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