| Literature DB >> 23251186 |
C Hoyoux1, P Forget, C Piette, M F Dresse, B Florkin, L Rausin, A Thiry.
Abstract
Paravertebral malignant tumors constitute 4.8% of cancer cases in pediatric oncology and are mostly composed of neuroblastoma (46.4%) and soft tissue sarcomas (35.7%). We describe the case of a Caucasian 6-year-old boy who was admitted for middle back pain radiated to limbs and progressively increasing weakness of the legs, suggesting a spinal cord disease. The exploration revealed two paravertebral masses extending through the neural foraminae into the epidural space. The association with elevated serum neuron specific enolase suggested at first the diagnosis of neuroblastoma, but the pathological examination revealed a Burkitt's lymphoma. This is a rare location of sporadic Burkitt's lymphoma with neurologic syndrome as first symptoms.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23251186 PMCID: PMC3522419 DOI: 10.1155/2012/891714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Figure 1Spine MRI (median sagittal STIR): heterogeneous captation in some vertebrae (T7, T12, L1, L3, L4, S2), suggesting bone marrow infiltration.
Figure 2MRI (axial T1): dorsal paravertebral mass (T7) (A) with extra dural deposits and compressin of the thecal sac (B) from tumor spread.
Figure 3MRI (coronal T1 gadolinium): left dorsal paravertebral tumor (T7–T9) (A) and left dorso-lumbar paravertebral mass (B) with epidural compression (C) through infiltration via intervertebral foraminae (T12–L2). Bilateral nodular nephromegaly (D).
Figure 4MRI (axial T1 gadolinium) lumbar paravertebral tumor (A) with epidural compression (B) through foraminae infiltration; bilateral nodular nephromegaly (C); heterogeneity captation of the vertebra (D), suggesting bone marrow infiltration.
Figure 5Pathology of tumour specimen instead of biopsy of the tumour anatomopathology (HE—400x): intermediate size homogenous basophilic cells with hyperchromatic nuclei containing nucleoli: Burkitt's lymphoma.