| Literature DB >> 27433367 |
Omar S Akbik1, Crina Floruta1, Muhammad O Chohan1, Karen S SantaCruz2, Andrew P Carlson1.
Abstract
Paragangliomas are rare neuroendocrine tumors that are mostly found in the head and neck. Even less common are gangliocytic variant paragangliomas of the spine for which there are only 7 other documented cases in the literature. We report a case of gangliocytic paraganglioma of the sacral spine in a 68-year-old man. The growth pattern is documented over three years, which to our knowledge has not previously been reported in the literature and is different from the natural history. Clinical, radiological, and pathological characteristics of the tumor are discussed in light of available reports of this rare tumor.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27433367 PMCID: PMC4940518 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1232594
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Surg
Figure 1MRI of the lumbar spine with and without contrast. (a) Sagittal T2, (b) sagittal T1, and (c) sagittal T1 after fat saturation: Displays a T1 isointense, T2 hyperintense contrast enhancing mass at the S1-S2 level. The mass measures approx. 3.4 × 1.2 cm without local invasion into surrounding structures.
Figure 2T2-weighted gradient ECHO MRI of the brain: superficial siderosis with hemosiderin deposition seen in the vermis and folia of the cerebellum.
Figure 3MRI of the lumbar spine with and without contrast. (a) Sagittal T2, (b) sagittal T1, and (c) sagittal T1 after fat saturation: significant enlargement of previously noted sacral mass with new bony erosion and significant mass effect within the spinal canal causing displacement of posterior spinal structures. The mass has taken a more lobulated appearance as seen on the T2 images and is vividly contrast enhancing.
Figure 4Gangliocytic paraganglioma. (a) Gangliocytic paraganglioma depicting nested arrangement of cells in a Zellballen pattern. H&E stain, 20x. (b) Gangliocytic paraganglioma with ganglion cells (arrow head). H&E stain, 40x. (c) Section of the tumor capsule showing pigmented macrophages (brown) and extracellular hemoglobin breakdown product (yellow). H&E stain, 4x. (d) Focus of remote hemorrhage toward the periphery of the tumor. H&E stain, 20x. (e) Synaptophysin stain positive (brown): positive for synaptic vesicle protein, 20x. (f) S100 stain positive for sustentacular cells (dark brown along edges of lobules), 20x.
Clinical features of reported gangliocytic paragangliomas in cauda equina region.
| Case | Age/sex | Clinical presentation | Location | Size (mm) | Pathological findings | Intervention |
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| Current case | 68/M | Temporary urinary incontinence, LE, perineal paresthesias | S1-S2 intradural | 60 × 26 | Neuroendocrine cells in Zellballen pattern, ganglion cells, abundant cytoplasm, GFAP (−), S100 (+), synaptophysin (+) | Complete surgical resection |
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| Vural et al. [ | 17/M | Low back pain, sciatica, difficulty in ambulation | L4 intradural | 50 × 30 | Neuroendocrine cells in Zellballen pattern, ganglion cells, calcification, GFAP (−), S100 (+) | Complete surgical resection |
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| Llena et al. [ | 42/M | Low back pain, LE weakness | L1 intradural | 35 × 20 | Neuroendocrine cells in Zellballen pattern, large neurons, neurosecretory granules, dopamine (+) | Complete surgical resection |
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| Matschke et al. [ | 63/F | Low back pain | Cauda equina | Neuroendocrine cells in Zellballen pattern, vascular tissue, ganglion cells, GFAP (+) | Complete surgical resection | |
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| Djindjian et al. [ | 36/M | Low back pain, sudden paraplegia following sacral infiltration of medication | L2–L5 intradural | 80 × 30 | Cells in Zellballen pattern, large mature neurons, gangliocytic differentiation, neurosecretory granules | Complete surgical resection |
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| Mishra et al. [ | ||||||
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| Moran et al. [ | ||||||