Interactive Transcript
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This was a woman who was complaining about cervical
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spine neck pain without radiculopathy.
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As the study was being performed for cervical
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spine degenerative changes,
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it was noted that the neuroforamen
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was enlarged at the C6-C7 level.
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The axial scans in the soft tissue and in the bone
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algorithm showed that there appeared to be a mass that
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was present at that level that was slightly
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hyperdense to the normal spinal cord,
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and there was the enlargement of the neuroforamen
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associated with it. Now, this combination of a mass in the
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intradural extramedullary compartment with enlargement of the
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neuroforamen, would probably lead to a
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diagnosis of a nerve sheath tumor.
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An MRI scan was requested for verification.
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The study was done with contrast,
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and I'm just going to show you the
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post-gadolinium enhanced images.
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So here we have the sagittal post-contrast scan, and you'll
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notice that the mass is associated with dural tail
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and it sort of sandwiches the spinal cord.
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However, potentially we can still identify the enlargement of the
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subarachnoid space when we look at the scan here more
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inferiorly where the there is widening of the CSF space.
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On the axial scan, we see that the mass is displacing
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the spinal cord to the right side, is filling the thecal sac,
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but also extends out into the soft tissues of the
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cervical region, including the brachial plexus.
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This ended up being a meningioma of the cervical spine
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and the key feature was the dural
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tail that was associated with it.
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So just to make sure we're all on the same page,
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this is the mass,
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this is the portion of the dural tail
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that's seen posteriorly.
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And the more anterior part is what
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we see on the axial scan,
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where you can see it curves around to come anterior
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to the spinal cord on the left side.
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One curious thing is that the dural tail does not
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necessarily mean that there are tumor cells at that
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location. When you look histopathologically,
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in some of the cases,
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the dural tail represents reactive change in the
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meninges with fibrovascular infiltration
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without neoplastic spread. However,
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that's only determined postoperatively in the
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histopathologic evaluation. Therefore,
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most surgeons will operate and try to take out the
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entire dural tail with the meningioma, because they don't
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know whether there's tumor cells within that tail.
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And so to prevent recurrence or residual tumor,
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they will resect the entire portion of the lesion including the tail.
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Nonetheless, as you look at this particular scan,
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you see that there is a difference between the tumor,
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clearly the tumor portion and the brighter
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signal intensity that is the dural tail.
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In this particular case,
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I would wonder whether that is fibrovascular
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proliferation as opposed to neoplastic
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infiltration of the dural tail.
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