| Literature DB >> 35117863 |
Yang Gu1, Xin Chen2, Linquan Zhou1, Wenge Liu1.
Abstract
Spinal aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) is a rare benign bone lesion with various prognosis. Common clinical symptoms of spinal ABCs include local pain, swelling. But we presented a case of a teenager girl who exhibited symptoms of acute thoracic cord compression after a slight trauma and was then diagnosed with ABC in her thoracic spine. A unique aspect is that this patient did not have symptoms before she fell down on her hip, and had an acute worsening of her neurological deficits. In the vast majority of cases, for a teenager, the trauma on the spine is tiny after falling down on the hips. That is the reason we initially felt confused before she had an urgent CT scan. In order to achieve early decompression of the thoracic cord and stabilization of the local spine around T4, we proceeded with urgent lesion resection and pedicle screws fixation from T2 to T5 to remove the liquid containing cyst and achieve spinal stability. Postoperative pathology indicated the lesion was an ABC. The patient gained good neurological recovery without any adverse effect in the final follow-up. We believe spinal ABC of teenagers can have no symptoms until a slight trauma leading to acute neurological deficits. Careful preparing for emergency surgery, prompt resection of the lesion as well as spinal stability reconstruction can promote good recovery and minimal adverse effect. 2020 Translational Cancer Research. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Thoracic cord; aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC); case report
Year: 2020 PMID: 35117863 PMCID: PMC8797431 DOI: 10.21037/tcr-20-1124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Cancer Res ISSN: 2218-676X Impact factor: 1.241
Figure 1(A) Axial computed tomography scan: thoracic cord compression (red arrow) and osseous borders (blue arrow). (B) Axial magnetic resonance imaging: fluid-fluid levels (blue arrows) and compression (red arrow). (C) Sagittal magnetic resonance imaging: compression by the lesion. (D) Enhanced magnetic resonance imaging: both posterior and bilateral compression.
Figure 2Computed tomography sagittal image after the surgery revealing a red arrow pointing at the length of the excised lamina and the implanted eight pedicle screws from T2 to T5 in order to maintain the stability of the column.
Figure 3Treatment and follow-up timeline.
Figure 4(A) The general view of the lesion with bloody liquid outflowed. (B) High power histology demonstrating scattered multinucleated giant cells (black arrows) within a dense background of bland fibroblasts in the septation and blood-filled cystic space (blue arrow); ×100 times.