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Incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: Its clinical features and surgical management without stability

Schwannomas are benign encapsulated tumors of Schwan cells that grow slowly along the peripheral myelin nerve fibers. Sacral spinal schwannomas are very rare, and the incidence of sacral schwannoma ranges from 1-5% of all spinal schwannomas, and only around 50 cases are reported in the literature. T...

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Autores principales: Togral, Guray, Arikan, Murat, Hasturk, Askin E., Gungor, Safak
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Riyadh : Armed Forces Hospital 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4727657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24983285
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author Togral, Guray
Arikan, Murat
Hasturk, Askin E.
Gungor, Safak
author_facet Togral, Guray
Arikan, Murat
Hasturk, Askin E.
Gungor, Safak
author_sort Togral, Guray
collection PubMed
description Schwannomas are benign encapsulated tumors of Schwan cells that grow slowly along the peripheral myelin nerve fibers. Sacral spinal schwannomas are very rare, and the incidence of sacral schwannoma ranges from 1-5% of all spinal schwannomas, and only around 50 cases are reported in the literature. There are 3 defined types of sacral schwannomas. These are retroperitoneal or presacral, intra osseous, and spinal schwannomas. Patients commonly present with complaints of pain and paresthesia due to the spinal schwannoma extending to extra spinal tissues. Direct x-ray, CT, MRI, and scintigraphy are used for preoperative diagnosis and treatment planning. Local recurrence and transformation to malignancy is very rare. For this reason, the frequently preferred treatments are subtotal removal of the mass or simple enucleation. In our article, we discuss the clinical features and the surgical treatment we performed without the need for stabilization in an incidentally determined giant invasive schwannoma case.
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spelling pubmed-47276572016-02-02 Incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: Its clinical features and surgical management without stability Togral, Guray Arikan, Murat Hasturk, Askin E. Gungor, Safak Neurosciences (Riyadh) Case Report Schwannomas are benign encapsulated tumors of Schwan cells that grow slowly along the peripheral myelin nerve fibers. Sacral spinal schwannomas are very rare, and the incidence of sacral schwannoma ranges from 1-5% of all spinal schwannomas, and only around 50 cases are reported in the literature. There are 3 defined types of sacral schwannomas. These are retroperitoneal or presacral, intra osseous, and spinal schwannomas. Patients commonly present with complaints of pain and paresthesia due to the spinal schwannoma extending to extra spinal tissues. Direct x-ray, CT, MRI, and scintigraphy are used for preoperative diagnosis and treatment planning. Local recurrence and transformation to malignancy is very rare. For this reason, the frequently preferred treatments are subtotal removal of the mass or simple enucleation. In our article, we discuss the clinical features and the surgical treatment we performed without the need for stabilization in an incidentally determined giant invasive schwannoma case. Riyadh : Armed Forces Hospital 2014-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4727657/ /pubmed/24983285 Text en Copyright: © Neurosciences Neurosciences is an Open Access journal and articles published are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (CC BY-NC). Readers may copy, distribute, and display the work for non-commercial purposes with the proper citation of the original work.
spellingShingle Case Report
Togral, Guray
Arikan, Murat
Hasturk, Askin E.
Gungor, Safak
Incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: Its clinical features and surgical management without stability
title Incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: Its clinical features and surgical management without stability
title_full Incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: Its clinical features and surgical management without stability
title_fullStr Incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: Its clinical features and surgical management without stability
title_full_unstemmed Incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: Its clinical features and surgical management without stability
title_short Incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: Its clinical features and surgical management without stability
title_sort incidentally diagnosed giant invasive sacral schwannoma: its clinical features and surgical management without stability
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4727657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24983285
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