• Neurosurgery · Jan 2006

    Case Reports

    Spinal neurenteric cysts in the magnetic resonance imaging era.

    • Arnold H Menezes and Vincent C Traynelis.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA. arnold-menezes@uiowa.edu
    • Neurosurgery. 2006 Jan 1; 58 (1): 97-105; discussion 97-105.

    ObjectiveNeurenteric cysts are derived from displaced entodermal tissue. They are infrequently found in the ventral spinal canal with varying degrees of success in their removal. Experience with 10 such individuals is critically analyzed to aid in the diagnosis and management.MethodsTen patients, ages 4 through 55 years, with neurenteric cysts were encountered in the last 20 years. This series included three females and seven males; seven children and three adults. The follow-up periods ranged from 3 to 18 years. Three cysts were located at the ventral cervicomedullary junction, five in the midventral cervical spine, and one thoracic and one lumbosacral. The symptoms reflected the location.ResultsSix of the 10 patients had associated bony abnormalities such as bifid clivus, hemivertebrae, segmentation failures at the site of the lesion, and blocked vertebra. The patient with the thoracic spinal lesion (age, 55 yr) had symptoms from early childhood. A diplomyelia at the site of the lesion was seen in one individual and tethered spinal cord in the same adult and in a young child. Two patients had undergone laminectomy for aspiration and partial resection before referral to our institution at the time of recurrence. Cervicomedullary junction lesions were approached via the far lateral transcondylar approach; two of the cervical intramedullary lesions were resected via a ventral corpectomy with radical resection and interbody fusion. The goal in each case was complete resection to avoid recurrences.ConclusionSpinal neurenteric cysts are ventrally located, usually intradural and extramedullary, but may insinuate into the spinal cord. They are isointense on T1 images and hyperintense on T2-weighted images on magnetic resonance imaging without true enhancement. These lesions may be associated with block and hemivertebrae with a predisposition to the craniocervical region. Partial resections have led to recurrence and arachnoiditis.

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