Get a Group Membership for your Organization. Free Trial
Pricing
Free TrialLogin

Rare Case of a Spinal Cord Lipoma

HIDE
PrevNext

0:00

This next case ranks as the second most

0:04

bizarre spinal cord lesion that I've ever seen.

0:09

This was a child that had spastic quadriplegia.

0:14

As we scroll on the T1-weighted scan, we see a

0:17

lesion which is bright in signal intensity.

0:22

It almost looks like the cord is coursing

0:24

through it, but in point of fact, on T2-weighted scan,

0:28

this does not look like cord signal.

0:32

And as we look at the border of the lesion,

0:35

we see that indeed, this lesion is identified

0:39

as being intramedullary intradural.

0:43

Now what would be bright on T1 and bright on T2?

0:46

Well, we usually think in terms of blood

0:49

products, fat, melanin, gadolinium enhancement,

0:55

high protein, and in this case, when we look at

0:59

the STIR image, we can sort of sort things out.

1:03

The STIR image shows suppression of fat,

1:06

and indeed, this case represents a spinal cord lipoma.

1:15

If we go to the axial scans on

1:19

T1-weighted imaging, you see the bright

1:22

signal intensity against of fat, and the

1:24

cord is essentially replaced by the fat.

1:30

Very bizarre.

1:32

Quite enlarged.

1:34

Now, will Dr. Yousem

1:36

ever stop lying to you?

1:39

Most of the time, when we think

1:40

of a lipoma of this nature in a

1:44

child, it is of a congenital basis.

1:47

So, a dermoid, or a congenital lipoma rather

1:51

than being placed in the neoplastic category.

1:55

Now, some of you might still be

1:57

skeptical that this represents fat.

1:59

And for that reason, I will pull down

2:01

for your entertainment, the CT scan.

2:06

So here on the CT scan, we see the low

2:09

density of fat within this spinal cord lipoma,

2:16

a congenital lesion of the spinal cord.

2:21

But when we think of lipoma,

2:22

we usually characterize it as

2:25

either congenital or neoplastic.

2:29

So this is a very bizarre case,

2:31

but I will show you one that is even

2:34

more unusual in just the moment.

2:37

Stay tuned.

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

Congenital

CT

© 2024 MRI Online. All Rights Reserved.

Contact UsTerms of UsePrivacy Policy