Successful surgical strategy for a cervical hemangioblastoma: Case report

Hemangioblastomas are hypervascular lesions and hence their surgical management is challenging. In particular, if complete resection is to be attained, all feeding and draining vessels must be occluded. Although most intramedullary spinal cord tumors are treated utilizing a posterior approach, we de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surgical neurology international 2016, Vol.7 (Suppl 25), p.S660-S663
Hauptverfasser: Imai, Hideaki, Ishii, Kazuhiko, Chikuda, Hirotaka, Ohya, Junichi, Nakagawa, Daichi, Kondo, Tomomasa, Nomura, Seiji, Yoshino, Masanori, Miyawaki, Satoru, Kin, Taichi, Nakatomi, Hirofumi, Saito, Nobuhito
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hemangioblastomas are hypervascular lesions and hence their surgical management is challenging. In particular, if complete resection is to be attained, all feeding and draining vessels must be occluded. Although most intramedullary spinal cord tumors are treated utilizing a posterior approach, we describe an anterior surgical strategy for resection of an intramedullary cervical hemangioblastoma. A 36-year-old female with a spinal hemangioblastoma located in the anterior cervical spinal cord presented with a long-standing history of motor weakness of the right upper extremity. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a large multilevel extensive syrinx and a focal intramedullary enhanced tumor at the C6 level. Angiography showed that the main feeder to the tumor was the left radicular artery (C8), which originated from the thyrocervical trunk, penetrated the dura mater, and branched both rostrally and caudally into the anterior spinal artery (ASA). Three-dimensional computer graphic images showed the tumor was located in the anterior part of the spinal cord, adjacent to and supplied by the ASA. The planned anterior surgical approach involved a total corpectomy of C6 and partial corpectomies of C5 and C7. The tumor was entirely removed despite multiple adhesions, and was successfully freed from the ASA. Patency of the ASA was confirmed utilizing intraoperative indocyanine green videoangiography. Intraoperatively, no monitoring changes were encountered. The pathological diagnosis was of a hemangioblastoma. No postoperative deficit occurred. An anterior approach for the resection of an anteriorly located intramedullary spinal hemangioblastomas was successfully accomplished in this case.
ISSN:2229-5097
2152-7806
2152-7806
DOI:10.4103/2152-7806.191072