Meningioma, Thoracic intrathecal extramedullary

H&P


Imaging

Thoracic spine MRI with and without contrast
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There is a homogeneously enhancing intradural extramedullary lesion at the T8-T9 level (localized caudally from C1 on scout MRI). The mass causes significant mass effect, displacing the spinal cord to the right. A visible dural attachment (red arrow) is noted, highly suggestive of a spinal meningioma."


Differential Diagnosis


Surgical Intervention


Intra-operative Imaging

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Intraoperative fluoroscopy was used for level localization.
Two separate shots were taken (upper two), counting cranially from the sacrum/L5.
NB: this patient has sacralization of L5 and the spinal needle is located at L1.


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Following the laminectomy, intraoperative ultrasound was utilized to localize the tumor and define its cranial and caudal extents prior to the durotomy.


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Under microscopic visualization, the surgical field was oriented with the cranial direction to the left. The tumor was observed to be ventral and left-lateral to the spinal cord. With the patient in the prone position and the operator standing on the patient’s left, the lesion was identified displacing the cord dorsoposteriorly and toward the right.


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The tumor was removed on bloc. All the nerves and vessels were kept intact. The dural attachment was coagulated.


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Tumor specimen.


Post-op Course


Pathology

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Meningothelial meningioma, CNS WHO grade 1.
The black arrows are pointing at the psammoma bodies.


Discussion

Tip

  • Study the pre-operative imaging well! One of the most common errors is operating at the wrong level.
  • Never retract the spinal cord, work around it!
  • Preserve all the arteries and veins as possible, especially anterior/posterior spinal arteries and Artery of Adamkiewicz.