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Pure epidural spinal cavernous haemangioma
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How to cite this article: Manoharan R, Parkinson J. Pure epidural spinal cavernous haemangioma. Surg Neurol Int 2021;12:523.
Abstract
Background:
Pure epidural spinal cavernous hemangiomas (SCH) account for only 4% of all spinal epidural lesions. Our literature review identified 61 publications reporting on, a total of 175 cases in the magnetic resonance imaging era. Here, we reviewed those cases, and have added our case of what appeared to be a multifocal SCH.
Case Description:
A 72-year-old male presented with a progressive paraparesis attributed to a T5/T6 dorsolateral extradural mass extending into the right T5/6 foramen. Surgical excision documented the lesion, histologically, was a SCH. A second similar lesion was noted involving the left C7/T1 foramen; as the patient was asymptomatic from this lesion, and no additional biopsy was performed. The patient returned to normal neurological function within 2 months postoperatively.
Conclusions:
Here, a 72-year-old male presented with a pathologically confirmed T5/T6 epidural SCH and a secondary C7/T1 foraminal lesion suspected to represent a secondary focus of an epidural SCH.
Keywords
Cavernous hemangioma
Epidural
Myelopathy
Spinal
Surgical excision
INTRODUCTION
Pure epidural spinal cavernous hemangiomas (SCH) account for only 4% of all spinal epidural lesions. Notably, 61 studies identified 175 cases in the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) era. Here, we reviewed those cases, and now add 72-year-old male with a pathologically confirmed T5/T6 epidural SCH lesion.
CASE DESCRIPTION
A 72-year-old male presented with slowly progressive incoordination and mild lower extremity weakness. The computed tomography (CT) scan documented an extradural T5/T6 lesion with the right T5/6 foraminal bony remodeling/extension. The MR further demonstrated that the lesion was well-circumscribed, and occupied the right T5/T6 dorsolateral spinal canal; it was hypointense on T1/hyperintense on T2-weighted images, and homogeneously enhanced with contrast [Figure 1]. Although it caused thoracic cord compression, there was no hyperintense intramedullary cord signal on the T2-weighted study. A second left C7/T1 asymptomatic foraminal lesion showed similar CT/MR imaging characteristics, but was not pathologically confirmed to be a SCH. Of interest, neither lesion involved the vertebral bodies themselves, nor spinal angiography documented no high-flow vascular malformation at either level.

Surgery
Following a T5-6 laminectomy, a soft, purple, well-circumscribed mass was easily dissected away from the underlying dura, allowing for complete resection in a piecemeal manner.
Pathology
The histopathology of the T5/T6 lesion proved to be an epidural SCH.
Postoperative course
Postoperatively, the patient experienced a full neurological recovery.
DISCUSSION
Pure epidural SCH are rare, accounting for only 4% of spinal epidural lesions,[7] 3–16% of spinal vascular malformations,[2] and 12% of all SCH.[7]
Clinical findings
The 175 patients in 61 studies all had single SCH lesions. Patients typically presented with myelopathy (64%), followed by radiculopathy (30%), and axial pain (6%) [Table 1]. The majority demonstrated slow symptom progression with only 11% presenting acutely due to intra-tumoral hemorrhage or thrombosis.[7]

SCH lesion locations
SCH lesions predominantly involved the thoracic spine (64%), followed by the lumbar (20%), cervical (10%), and sacral spinal levels (6%). Most lesions were dorsal/dorsolateral in location. Some lateral lesions produce foraminal remodeling. When present, dumbbell morphology frequently led to the misdiagnosis of these lesions as schwannomas.[5]
Imaging findings
On MR imaging, epidural SCH were classically iso-intense on T1, hyper-intense on T2, and homogeneously enhanced with contrast. Intralesional T2 hyper-intensity is thought to represent stagnant blood contained within large vascular channels.[1] When intra-tumoral hemorrhage occurs, mixed T1 signal is seen within the SCH lesion and heterogeneous enhancement is produced.
Operative findings
Although recurrent lesions may be adherent to the dura, most epidural SCH were well-defined, encapsulated, and readily separated from the dura.[3] Their relative vascularity originates from the plexus surrounding the posterior longitudinal ligament, and/or foraminal vessels.[4] The mean intraoperative blood loss reported for these procedures averaged 200 ml, but was typically higher for dumbbell tumors.[5,6]
Prognosis
Surgical outcomes for SCH are generally favorable. However, those who present with the rapid onset of new neurological deficits secondary to acute intra-tumoral hemorrhages have poorer prognoses.[3,5]
CONCLUSION
Pure epidural SCH are rare and may mimic other more common benign tumors such as schwannomas. The natural history is one of slow symptom progression with favorable outcomes. However, the prognoses are guarded for the 10% who present with acute intra-tumoral hemorrhages and develop the rapid onset of paralysis.
Declaration of patient consent
The authors certify that they have obtained all appropriate patient consent.
Financial support and sponsorship
Nil.
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts of interest.
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