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Primary Spinal Tumors (Soft tissue tumors)

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Re Hemorrhage rates are rare. * The case of an intramedullary intradural thoracic spinal cord lipoma in the absence of dysraphism is an extraordinary finding. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Primary Spinal Tumors (Soft tissue tumors)


1
Primary Spinal Tumors(Soft tissue tumors)
  • H. Louis Harkey
  • Department of Neurosurgery
  • University of Mississippi
  • Jackson, MS

2
Anatomical Classification of Spinal Cord Tumors
  • Extradural Benign and malignant verteberal
    tumors, tumors near the spinal cord.
  • Intradural tumors
  • Extramedullary nerve sheath and menengial
  • Intramedullary glial and other

3
Meningioma
  • Slow growing benign masses producing indolent
    symptoms
  • 15 of all meningiomas are spinal
  • 51 female to male ratio
  • Typically intradural extramedullary but can be
    extadural
  • Most commonly thoracic in location, Cervical
    second most common

4
Meningioma
  • Clinical presentation is indistinguishable from
    any other slow growing intraspinal mass
  • Deficits are often dramatically reversible
  • Treatment is resection by safest route
  • Total resection including dural attachment and/or
    cauterization of the adjacent dura 1
    recurrence rate
  • Subtotal resection has much higher risk of
    recurrence

5
Schwannoma
  • Account for 25 of intradural 50 of
    intradural, extramedullary tumors
  • 70 intradural, 15 dumbbell, 5 extradural
  • 0.3-0.4 cases/100,000 per year
  • Typically present in 4th and 5th decade
  • No male-female predilection
  • Present with radicular pain, weakness in lumbar
    tumors, long tract motor signs urinary
    retention in cervical thoracic

6
Schwannoma
  • Benign tumors
  • Arise from Schwann cells of the sensory rootlets
  • Tumor only contains Schwann cells and causes
    symptoms by compressing neural elements
  • Can be removed via hemilaminectomy in most cases
  • Total resection is curative
  • Residual tumor should be followed long term
  • Long tract signs typically improve after
    resection

Fewer Antoni B cells
7
Neurofibroma Neurofibromatosis
  • Commonly seen in NF-1
  • Occur more frequently in the cervical spine in
    NF-1
  • May be intradural, extradural or dumbell
  • Often multiple
  • Sometimes plexiform

8
Neurofibroma
  • Benign
  • Fusiform expansion of the nerve (Schwann,
    perineural and neural cells)
  • Difficult to get complete resection because of
    the extra-foramenal extension and risk of
    functional loss

9
Ganglioneuroma
  • Pathology
  • Ganglioneuroma (extradural, dumbbell)
  • Gangliocytoma
  • Ganglioglioma (intradural-intramedullary)
  • Most are benign though Gangliogliomas may become
    malignant
  • More often seen in patients lt 30
  • Malefemale 32

10
Ganglioglioma
  • 10 of gangliogliomas are spinal, rest cranial
  • Most are paraspinal, may extend into canal
  • Arise from sympathetic NS
  • Rarely intramedullary
  • IM tumors do not have a plane

T 2
Contrast
11
Ependymoma
  • Seen in adults, 15 to 40
  • Male Female
  • Presenting signs depend on location
  • Longer duration, more severe symptoms less
    favorable functional outcome with surgery
  • Arise from ependymal lining of the central canal
    from filum terminale
  • Sometimes associated with a syrinx

12
Ependymoma
  • Arise from ependymal lining of the central canal,
  • Filum origin usually myxopapillary type
  • Very rarely malignant
  • Total resection is possible in the majority of
    tumors
  • The goal of surgery is complete resection with
    good functional outcome
  • Functional improvement common after resection
  • Progression free survival similar for total
    resection vs partial resection RT

Perivascular pseudorosettes
13
Astrocytoma
  • Occur at any age, average age of dx is 35 to 40
  • Accompanying syrinx in 40
  • Occurs equally throughout cord
  • Presenting sign depend upon location

14
Astrocytoma
  • Most are grade I or II
  • Complete surgical resection is impossible
  • RT recommended after dx
  • Outcomes similar for biopsy RT and resection
    RT
  • Low grade recurrent tumor can be treated with
    reresection

15
Hemangioblastoma
  • Highly vascular tumors comprising 2 of spinal
    cord tumors
  • ¼ associated with von Hippel-Lindau, ¾ sporadic
  • 10 times less common than intracranial
  • Male predominance
  • Presents mid life

16
Hemangioblastoma
  • Usually dorsal
  • Treatment is surgical resection
  • Sometimes multiple
  • Take feeding artery before draining vein
  • Grade I neoplasm
  • Differential renal cell CA (common in VHL)

17
Cavernous Angioma
  • Vascular malformation
  • M F, Female more likely to hemorrhage
  • More likely to present in 3rd 4th decade

18
Cavernous Angioma
  • Often dorsally located and comes to surface
  • Hemosiderin stained
  • Resection with second hemorrhage or progressive
    deficit
  • Thin walled abnormal vascular channels

19
Lipoma
  • Typically associated with spinal dysrahpism
  • Presents like any space occupying lesion with
    progressive myelopathy
  • Onset of symptoms often associated with weight
    gain

20
Lipoma
  • Treatment is surgical with debulking of the tumor
    and duraplasty
  • Must take care not to injure normal spinal cord.
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