Author:
Thapa Shanta,Yamahata Hitoshi,Okada Tomohisa,Yonenaga Masanori,Bajagain Madan,Makino Ryutaro,Hanaya Ryosuke
Abstract
Background:
Solitary fibrous tumor/hemangiopericytomas (SFT/HPCs) are rare mesenchymal tumors of nonmeningothelial origin that comprises <1% of all central nervous system tumors.
Case Description:
A 45-year-old male presented with sleep apnea (apnea-hypopnea index was 17.1 events/hour) and dysesthesias of the right upper and lower extremities. The magnetic resonance demonstrated a heterogeneous intradural extra-axial C1 mass with syringobulbia and syringomyelia. The right vertebral angiography revealed a hypervascular mass (i.e., intense tumor staining). With the preoperative diagnosis of a spinal hemangioblastoma, the patient underwent tumor removal. However, intraoperative findings demonstrated that the ventral component of the tumor was intramedullary without a dural attachment. Further, the histological diagnosis was consistent with SFT/HPC (HPC phenotype). The postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient’s symptoms and the syrinxes spontaneously regressed.
Conclusion:
A 45-year-old male presented a rare spinal intradural lesion at C1 appeared to be a spinal hemangioblastoma, but proved to be SFT/HPC (HPC phenotype) with intramedullary invasion.
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Surgery