Clinical and Radiologic Outcomes Following Fenestration and Partial Wall Excision of Idiopathic Intradural Spinal Arachnoid Cysts Presenting with Myelopathy.
World Neurosurg. 2017 May 31;:
Authors: Viswanathan V, Manoharan SR, Do H, Minnema A, Shaddy SM, Elder JB, Farhadi HF
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intradural spinal arachnoid cysts (ISACs) with associated neurologic deficits are infrequently encountered. Various management strategies have been proposed with minimal data on comparative outcomes.
OBJECTIVE: We describe the clinical and radiologic presentation as well as the outcomes of 14 surgically managed patients who presented with an ISAC and associated myelopathy.
METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the clinical course of consecutive patients presenting with neurologic deficits associated with idiopathic ISACs at our institution. The diagnoses were based on pre-operative MRI studies followed by intraoperative and histopathological confirmation.
RESULTS: 14 consecutive patients with ISACs (1 cervicothoracic, 12 thoracic, and 1 thoracolumbar) and associated myelopathy were identified. Syringomyelia was noted in 8 patients. All ISACs were treated with cyst fenestration and partial wall resection through a posterior approach. Pre-operative neurologic symptoms were noted to be stable or improved in all patients starting at 6-week post-operative follow-up. The median (interquartile range) pre-operative mJOA score was 13 (12.0 - 14.8) while the post-operative median score at a mean follow-up of 22 months (range 6-50 months) was 16 (14.0 - 17.0), which represents a median improvement (ΔmJOA) of 2.0 (1.3 - 3.0) (p < 0.001). Comparison of ΔmJOA scores between cases without and with associated syrinxes did not reveal a significant difference (p 0.23). Post-operative MRI scans revealed spinal cord re-expansion at the level of the ISAC in all cases and either complete or partial syrinx resolution in 7/8 cases.
CONCLUSIONS: Early treatment with fenestration and partial wall resection allows for cord decompression, syrinx resolution, and gradual resolution of myelopathic symptoms in most cases.
PMID: 28578118 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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