Cargando…

A Recurrent Cervical Neurenteric Cyst Treated Anteriorly: Safe, Gross-Total Excision Facilitated by Prophylactic Unilateral Vertebral Artery Exposure, Microdissection, and Spinal Cord Monitoring—A Case Report and Technical Note

This study reports on a 67-year-old woman with partial Brown-Séquard syndrome due to a recurrent cervical neurenteric cyst at C3 to C4. The myelopathic symptoms reappeared 22 years after a previous shunting operation performed posteriorly with a silicone tube connecting the intradural cervical cyst...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kida, Kazunobu, Tani, Toshikazu, Kawazoe, Tateo, Hiroi, Makoto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5857326/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29686917
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/7620182
_version_ 1783307450659635200
author Kida, Kazunobu
Tani, Toshikazu
Kawazoe, Tateo
Hiroi, Makoto
author_facet Kida, Kazunobu
Tani, Toshikazu
Kawazoe, Tateo
Hiroi, Makoto
author_sort Kida, Kazunobu
collection PubMed
description This study reports on a 67-year-old woman with partial Brown-Séquard syndrome due to a recurrent cervical neurenteric cyst at C3 to C4. The myelopathic symptoms reappeared 22 years after a previous shunting operation performed posteriorly with a silicone tube connecting the intradural cervical cyst cavity to the subarachnoid space. We have now succeeded in removing the cyst nearly completely with the anterior approach. The surgical procedure consisted of right vertebral artery exposure at C3 and C4 and a subtotal corpectomy of C3 followed by microdissection of the cyst, duraplasty, and iliac strut graft fusion. Spinal cord monitoring with motor-evoked potential studies helped us safely dissect the cyst wall tightly adhering to the spinal cord. Duraplasty with Gore-Tex patch-grafting in conjunction with postoperative lumbar subarachnoid drainage worked well in preventing a spinal fluid fistula. At two years after surgery, the patient showed a nearly complete return of function without any recurrence of the cyst.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5857326
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Hindawi
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-58573262018-04-23 A Recurrent Cervical Neurenteric Cyst Treated Anteriorly: Safe, Gross-Total Excision Facilitated by Prophylactic Unilateral Vertebral Artery Exposure, Microdissection, and Spinal Cord Monitoring—A Case Report and Technical Note Kida, Kazunobu Tani, Toshikazu Kawazoe, Tateo Hiroi, Makoto Case Rep Orthop Case Report This study reports on a 67-year-old woman with partial Brown-Séquard syndrome due to a recurrent cervical neurenteric cyst at C3 to C4. The myelopathic symptoms reappeared 22 years after a previous shunting operation performed posteriorly with a silicone tube connecting the intradural cervical cyst cavity to the subarachnoid space. We have now succeeded in removing the cyst nearly completely with the anterior approach. The surgical procedure consisted of right vertebral artery exposure at C3 and C4 and a subtotal corpectomy of C3 followed by microdissection of the cyst, duraplasty, and iliac strut graft fusion. Spinal cord monitoring with motor-evoked potential studies helped us safely dissect the cyst wall tightly adhering to the spinal cord. Duraplasty with Gore-Tex patch-grafting in conjunction with postoperative lumbar subarachnoid drainage worked well in preventing a spinal fluid fistula. At two years after surgery, the patient showed a nearly complete return of function without any recurrence of the cyst. Hindawi 2018-03-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5857326/ /pubmed/29686917 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/7620182 Text en Copyright © 2018 Kazunobu Kida et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Kida, Kazunobu
Tani, Toshikazu
Kawazoe, Tateo
Hiroi, Makoto
A Recurrent Cervical Neurenteric Cyst Treated Anteriorly: Safe, Gross-Total Excision Facilitated by Prophylactic Unilateral Vertebral Artery Exposure, Microdissection, and Spinal Cord Monitoring—A Case Report and Technical Note
title A Recurrent Cervical Neurenteric Cyst Treated Anteriorly: Safe, Gross-Total Excision Facilitated by Prophylactic Unilateral Vertebral Artery Exposure, Microdissection, and Spinal Cord Monitoring—A Case Report and Technical Note
title_full A Recurrent Cervical Neurenteric Cyst Treated Anteriorly: Safe, Gross-Total Excision Facilitated by Prophylactic Unilateral Vertebral Artery Exposure, Microdissection, and Spinal Cord Monitoring—A Case Report and Technical Note
title_fullStr A Recurrent Cervical Neurenteric Cyst Treated Anteriorly: Safe, Gross-Total Excision Facilitated by Prophylactic Unilateral Vertebral Artery Exposure, Microdissection, and Spinal Cord Monitoring—A Case Report and Technical Note
title_full_unstemmed A Recurrent Cervical Neurenteric Cyst Treated Anteriorly: Safe, Gross-Total Excision Facilitated by Prophylactic Unilateral Vertebral Artery Exposure, Microdissection, and Spinal Cord Monitoring—A Case Report and Technical Note
title_short A Recurrent Cervical Neurenteric Cyst Treated Anteriorly: Safe, Gross-Total Excision Facilitated by Prophylactic Unilateral Vertebral Artery Exposure, Microdissection, and Spinal Cord Monitoring—A Case Report and Technical Note
title_sort recurrent cervical neurenteric cyst treated anteriorly: safe, gross-total excision facilitated by prophylactic unilateral vertebral artery exposure, microdissection, and spinal cord monitoring—a case report and technical note
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5857326/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29686917
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/7620182
work_keys_str_mv AT kidakazunobu arecurrentcervicalneurentericcysttreatedanteriorlysafegrosstotalexcisionfacilitatedbyprophylacticunilateralvertebralarteryexposuremicrodissectionandspinalcordmonitoringacasereportandtechnicalnote
AT tanitoshikazu arecurrentcervicalneurentericcysttreatedanteriorlysafegrosstotalexcisionfacilitatedbyprophylacticunilateralvertebralarteryexposuremicrodissectionandspinalcordmonitoringacasereportandtechnicalnote
AT kawazoetateo arecurrentcervicalneurentericcysttreatedanteriorlysafegrosstotalexcisionfacilitatedbyprophylacticunilateralvertebralarteryexposuremicrodissectionandspinalcordmonitoringacasereportandtechnicalnote
AT hiroimakoto arecurrentcervicalneurentericcysttreatedanteriorlysafegrosstotalexcisionfacilitatedbyprophylacticunilateralvertebralarteryexposuremicrodissectionandspinalcordmonitoringacasereportandtechnicalnote
AT kidakazunobu recurrentcervicalneurentericcysttreatedanteriorlysafegrosstotalexcisionfacilitatedbyprophylacticunilateralvertebralarteryexposuremicrodissectionandspinalcordmonitoringacasereportandtechnicalnote
AT tanitoshikazu recurrentcervicalneurentericcysttreatedanteriorlysafegrosstotalexcisionfacilitatedbyprophylacticunilateralvertebralarteryexposuremicrodissectionandspinalcordmonitoringacasereportandtechnicalnote
AT kawazoetateo recurrentcervicalneurentericcysttreatedanteriorlysafegrosstotalexcisionfacilitatedbyprophylacticunilateralvertebralarteryexposuremicrodissectionandspinalcordmonitoringacasereportandtechnicalnote
AT hiroimakoto recurrentcervicalneurentericcysttreatedanteriorlysafegrosstotalexcisionfacilitatedbyprophylacticunilateralvertebralarteryexposuremicrodissectionandspinalcordmonitoringacasereportandtechnicalnote