Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: A Distinctive Clinicopathological Entity

Author:

Pang Dachling1,Zovickian John2,Oviedo Angelica3,Moes Greg S4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatric Neurosurgery, University of California, Davis, Davis, California; and Regional Centre of Pediatric Neurosurgery, Kaiser Foundation Hospitals of Northern California, Oakland, California

2. Regional Centre of Pediatric Neurosurgery, Kaiser Foundation Hospitals of Northern California, Oakland, California

3. Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California

4. Kaiser Foundation Hospitals of Northern California, Oakland Medical Center, Oakland, California; and Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND: Limited dorsal myeloschisis (LDM) is a distinctive form of spinal dysraphism characterized by 2 constant features: a focal “closed” midline defect and a fibroneural stalk that links the skin lesion to the underlying cord. The embryogenesis is hypothesized to be incomplete disjunction between cutaneous and neural ectoderms, thus preventing complete midline skin closure and allowing persistence of a physical link (fibroneural stalk) between the disjunction site and the dorsal neural tube. OBJECTIVE: To illustrate these features in 51 LDM patients. METHODS: All patients were studied with magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography myelography, operated on, and followed for a mean of 7.4 years. RESULTS: There were 10 cervical, 13 thoracic, 6 thoracolumbar and 22 lumbar lesions. Two main types of skin lesion were saccular (21 patients), consisting of a skin-base cerebrospinal fluid sac topped with a squamous epithelial dome, and nonsaccular (30 patients), with a flat or sunken squamous epithelial crater or pit. The internal structure of a saccular LDM could be a basal neural nodule, a stalk that inserts on the dome, or a segmental myelocystocele. In nonsaccular LDMs, the fibroneural stalk has variable thickness and complexity. In all LDMs, the fibroneural stalk was tethering the cord. Twenty-nine patients had neurological deficits. There was a positive correlation between neurological grade and age, suggesting progression with chronicity. Treatment consisted of detaching the stalk from the cord. Most patients improved or remained stable. CONCLUSION: LDM is a distinctive clinicopathological entity and a tethering lesion with characteristic external and internal features. We propose a new classification incorporating both saccular and flat lesions.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Surgery

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4. Dysraphic lesions of the cervical spinal cord;Steinbok,1995

5. The nature of congenital posterior cervical or cervicothoracic midline cutaneous mass lesions;Steinbok;Report of eight cases. J Neurosurg,1991

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