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Pathology of Spinal Cord Tumors:

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Multiple high and low signal intensity. C5 vertebral body collapse. ... Multiple myeloma common in adults. Excellence in Health Education... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pathology of Spinal Cord Tumors:


1
Pathology of Spinal Cord Tumors
  • Dr. Venkatesh Murthy Shashidhar
  • Associate Professor of Pathology

2
Introduction
  • Uncommon significant morbidity
  • Epidural intradural
  • Intramedullary / Extramedullary

3
Spinal Cord Tumors - WHO
  • Metastatic tumors common. (ca, myeloma)
  • Glial tumors glioma (children)
  • Schwannoma (neurinoma, neurilemoma)
  • cellular, plexiform, and melanotic subtypes
  • Neurofibroma.
  • circumscribed (solitary)/plexiform.
  • Malignant schwannoma. (MPNST)
  • Epithelioid, mesenchymal, melanotic or mix.
  • Tumors of Meninges meningioma.
  • Paraganglioma, Chordoma, Chondroma.

4
Spinal cord metastasis-Prostate
  • cervical spine
  • Metastasis of prostate ca
  • Gradient-echo sagittal MRI.
  • Multiple high and low signal intensity
  • C5 vertebral body collapse.
  • Minimal cord deformity (arrowhead).

5
Neurofibroma
  • Endoneurial fibroblasts.
  • Form whorls of fibroblasts
  • Well differentiated, benign,
  • No capsule, nerve enlarge surgery.
  • Two types
  • Classic form - Cutaneous / nerve - Solitary
    collagen matrix, spindle cells,
  • Plexiform - Multiple, infiltrative, myxoid.

6
Schwannoma
  • Benign, adults, neck.
  • Schwann cells, form whorls
  • Nuclear palisading
  • Antoni A B pattern, Verocay bodies.
  • Bilateral of - 8th nerve - NF-2.

7
Schwannoma
8
Neurilemmoma
9
Schwannoma/Acoustic neuroma
10
Schwannoma
11
Antony A - Antony B
12
Antony B
Antony A
Palisades
13
Schwannoma Cerebellum
14
Neurofibromatosis
  • Type I (common)(AD, 17q, 13000)
  • Plexiform solitary neurofibromas
  • Optic nerve gliomas, Lisch nodules, Café au lait
    spots.
  • Type II (rare)(22q, 140,000)
  • Bilateral acoustic schwannoma/osis
  • Multiple meningioma/osis, ependymoma of spinal
    cord

15
Phakomatosis (Neurocut. dysplasia)
  • Neurologic abnormalities defects of skin or
    retina (ectodermal).
  • Neurofibromatosis (von Recklinghausen)
  • Tuberous Sclerosis
  • Sturge-Weber Sy (Encephalofacial Angiomatosis)
  • von Hippel-Lindau Disease
  • Neurocutaneous Melanosis

16
Neurofibromatosis - Von Recklinghausen
  • Dominant inheritance
  • Multiple neurofibromas
  • Central - CNS
  • peripheral nerves
  • Increased incidence of
  • meningioma
  • glioma
  • schwannoma - bilateral VIII N.
  • Cafe-au-lait (melanosis) in skin
  • Elephantiasis increased connective tissue

17
Von Recklinghausens Disease
Café-au-lait spots
Multiple neurofibromas
18
Von Recklinghausen Disease
19
Neurofibromatosis Type II
  • Bil Schwannomas
  • Meningiomas
  • Gliomas
  • Pheochromocytomas

20
Von Recklinghausen Disease
21
Plexiform Neurofibroma
22
Café-au-lait spots
23
Plexiform Neurofibroma
24
Malignant Neurofibroma
25
Traumatic Neuroma
26
  • Schwannoma
  • Schwann cells
  • Compress the nerve trunk
  • Encapsulated
  • Easily resectable without nerve damage
  • Microscopic
  • Antony A and B fibers
  • Verocay bodies
  • Neurofibroma
  • Schwann cells, neurites, fibroblasts
  • Fusiform and involves nerve trunk
  • Not encapsulated
  • Not resectable without sacrificing nerve
  • Micro- Intermingled cells with wavy nuclei

27
Metastatic tumors
  • 25 times more common than primary (breast, lung,
    prostate and kidney tumors, and lymphoma)
  • Plain-xray less sensitive.
  • Bone scans / MRI sensitive.
  • Multiple myeloma common in adults.

28
intramedullary glioblastoma.
  • MRI is from a 19-year-old man with 4-month
    history of progressive motor loss and inability
    to ambulate.

29
intramedullary glioblastoma.
  • MRI was produced from a 19-year-old man with
    4-month history of progressive motor loss and
    inability to ambulate.

30
Ganglio-glioma
  • 30y male,
  • 2 year history of numbness left buttock.
    Progressive bladder and bowel dysfunction urinary
    tract infections.
  • various sensory abnormalities burning and
    numbness in the perineum and difficulty in
    sensing the need to empty his bowels

31
Paraspinal teratoma
  • The patient was a previously healthy 20 month old
    boy who presented to the Emergency Room at
    Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh with flaccid
    paralysis of the lower extremities.
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