The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society
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Review Case Reports
Acute spinal cord compression caused by vertebral hemangioma.
The reported incidence of vertebral hemangioma within the spinal column is common. Most often these benign vascular tumors are incidental radiographic findings and do not cause neurological sequelae. Rarely, vertebral hemangiomas will cause compressive neurological symptoms, such as radiculopathy, myelopathy and paralysis. In these cases the clinical presentation is usually the subacute or delayed onset of progressive neurological symptoms. This report demonstrates a symptomatic vertebral hemangioma presenting with rapid onset neurologic sequelae. ⋯ Because of the rapid presentation of myelopathic symptoms in this case, preoperative angiographic embolization was not performed, and the patient underwent emergent decompressive surgery. In this case emergent operative decompression and stabilization was effective in reversing the patient's myelopathic symptoms, while maintaining long-term stability of the spinal column. Postoperative radiation was not administered because of the extent of tumor resection. Surgical intervention has produced long-term cure of this patient's myelopathy and T10 vertebral hemangioma.