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A 66 year-old man with a history of lung cancer presented with a three-week history of mid-back pain followed by rapidly progressive paraplegia and incontinence over 24 hours. |
Neoplastic Spinal Cord Compression: MRI scans of the thoracic
spine: (Left) T2-weighted sagittal image; (Right) T1-weighted axial
image. Note the large tumor arising from the
posterior bony elements at T4 that is compressing the
thoracic spinal cord. On the sagittal image, also note that the T4 vertebral body
is abnormal, infiltrated with tumor. Metastatic tumors that affect the spine
often begin as a metastasis to bone, especially the pedicle. As they
grow, they cause local pain. They then enlarge further and affect
the exiting nerve root at that level resulting in a clinical
radiculopathy. Only later do they grow and compress the spinal cord
or cauda equina, depending on their location. Clinical signs of
spinal cord compression typically appear acutely over hours to days.
They are a neurological / neurosurgical emergency usually requiring a
combination of high dose corticosteroids, radiation and surgical
decompression. |
Revised
11/25/06
Copyrighted 2006. David C Preston