RESUMO
Ovarian carcinoma is one among the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women. Most commonly it metastasizes within peritoneal cavity by transcoelomic spread; distant metastasis to central nervous system through hematogenous spread is rare, and intramedullary spread is even rarer. Till date, only six reports have identified isolated intramedullary metastasis to spinal cord in a patient who were considered disease free on follow-up after treatment of primary disease; of which only two were in dorsal spine. The average time for diagnosis of intramedullary metastasis after diagnosis of primary disease was 26 months in previous reports. All were on regular follow-up, and clinicians were misleaded by normal CA-125 levels, and patients were considered disease free. This report is third in world literature case of isolated intramedullary dorsal spinal cord metastasis in a patient of primary ovarian carcinoma who was on follow-up with normal CA-125 levels and was treated with myelotomy and gross total resection of lesion + adjuvant chemotherapy and oral steroids. With our experience, we recommend keeping magnetic resonance imaging neuraxis to be done in follow-up of patients treated for high-grade ovarian carcinoma so that early diagnosis and prompt management can be given to patients that can improve their quality of life.
RESUMO
Syringomyelia is a disorder of the spinal cord usually seen in association with a variety of craniovertebral junction anomalies (e.g. , Chiari malformations, basilar invagination/impression, atlantoaxial instability, etc.). Its natural history is not very clearly understood and a majority of patients present with a slowly progressive neurological deficit followed by sudden rapid deterioration. At present, there is a general consensus to offer surgical decompression in all patients diagnosed with Chiari I malformation with syrinx irrespective of their symptoms in order to prevent delayed neurological worsening. Few authors have reported spontaneous resolution of syrinx with persistent tonsillar herniation without operative treatment. We report one such patient and propose anterior spinal cord fissuring as a plausible cause of spontaneous syrinx drainage. We also propose conservative management for patients with an anterior spinal cord fissure seen in index scans instead of early decompression of Chiari malformation.
RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: In India, few centers are using 1.5 Tesla intraoperative MRI systems. We are using a 3 Tesla iMRI system. We share our initial experience of 3T iMRI in neurosurgical procedures with evaluation of its utility and pitfalls. METHODS: A prospective observational study conducted between August 2017 to July 2018 at Yashoda Hospital, Secunderabad. All patients undergoing iMRI guided resection of intracranial SOL were included. RESULTS: First 100 patients with various intracranial SOLs were included. The mean time required in shifting and image acquisition was 85.6 minutes in first 20 cases which was reduced to 37.4 minutes in next the next cases. Primary GTR was achieved in 44% cases, and residues were detected in 56%, secondary GTR was achieved in 37% cases, and surgery was discontinued in 19%. Maximum residues were detected in intraaxial sols and pituitary macroadenomas. No major iMRI associated complications were seen, minor issues involving transportation and minor contact burns were seen in 4 cases, insignificant anesthetic procedure related complications in 19 cases. CONCLUSION: As per our experience iMRI is an excellent tool to guide and improve the extent of safe resection by 37% in brain tumor surgeries. Good image quality, less time for image acquisition was observed advantages of 3T system. iMRI success depends on multidepartment coordinated teamwork and multiple iterations of the process to smoothen the workflow.