<% strPathPics = Session("strPathPicsL") imgBg = strPathPics + Session("strMedia") %> Metastatic Disease

Metastatic Disease - Melanoma

A 47 year-old woman with a history of melanoma presented with progressive weakness and numbness of both legs.

Show the Tumor Masses   Show the Gadolinium Enhancement of the Roots

Neoplastic Spinal Cord Compression: T1-weighted with gadolinium sagittal MRI. Note the several large enhancing masses in the lower spinal cord and nerve roots extending from T12 through S1. If one looks closely, one can see that the entire thecal sac is obliterated by enhancing tumor adjacent to S1 and S2.

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 11/30/06
Copyrighted 2006. David C Preston