Literature DB >> 19282731

The vanishment of an intramedullary high-signal intensity lesion at the craniocervical junction after surgical treatment: a case report of the presyrinx state.

Takashi Yurube1, Masatoshi Sumi, Takako Kanatani, Aritetsu Kanemura, Minoru Doita.   

Abstract

STUDY
DESIGN: A case report of the presyrinx state at the craniocervical junction with vanishment of an intramedullary high-signal lesion followed by decompression and fixation.
OBJECTIVE: To report the reversible change of an intramedullary high-signal lesion on T2-weighted MRI as a presyrinx state. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: The pathology of a T2-weighted high-signal intensity area in the spinal cord has not yet been described in detail. The case presented here showed the vanishment of this lesion after the surgical procedure, which implies that some high-signal intensity lesions might be reversible as a presyrinx state.
METHODS: A 75-year-old man presented with severe cervical myelopathy. Neurologic findings and observations on various images indicated compression myelopathy due to both a pseudotumor at the craniocervical junction and spondylosis at C3-C4 disc level due to Klippel-Feil syndrome. The most obvious finding was a vast high-signal intensity lesion at the craniocervical junction, which was speculated to be a syringomyelia before surgery.
RESULTS: The MRI at 1 month after surgical treatment (occipito-spinal fusion with the decompression by enlargement of foramen magnum) revealed complete vanishment of the vast high intensity lesion at the craniocervical junction, which remained undetected at the 2 years and 8 months follow-up and corresponded with improvement in the clinical symptoms of myelopathy.
CONCLUSION: The vanishment of these signal changes on MRI after surgery was interpreted as a presyrinx state, demonstrating this reversible pathology in the spinal cord.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19282731     DOI: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e3181908ad9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Spine (Phila Pa 1976)        ISSN: 0362-2436            Impact factor:   3.468


  1 in total

1.  Anatomical features of the cervical spinal canal in Chiari I deformity with presyrinx: A case-control study.

Authors:  Judith A Gadde; Vinil Shah; Greta B Liebo; Geir A Ringstad; I Jonathan Pomeraniec; Soren J Bakke; Radek Fric; Alexander Ksendzovsky; John A Jane; Erin S Schwartz; Victor Haughton
Journal:  Neuroradiol J       Date:  2017-07-10
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.