Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

Surgical management of ventral intradural spinal lesions.
J Neurosurg Spine. 2011 Jul; 15(1):28-37.JN

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Access to the ventral intradural spinal canal may be required for treatment of a variety of lesions affecting the spinal cord and adjacent intradural structures. Adequate exposure is usually achieved through a standard posterior laminectomy or posterolateral approaches, although formal anterior approaches are used to access lesions in the subaxial cervical spine. Modifications of the standard posterior exposure as well as ventral or ventrolateral approaches are increasingly being used for treating intradural spinal pathologies. In this study, the authors review their experience with 35 consecutive cases of ventral intradural spinal lesions.

METHODS

Only patients with intradural lesions located completely ventral to the dentate ligament attachments were included in this retrospective study. Patients with the following lesions were excluded from the study: lesions at the level of the filum terminale/cauda equina, lesions with any component that extended dorsally to the dentate ligament, or lesions with extradural extension (that is, dumbbell tumors) below the C-2 level. Between January 2000 and September 2009, a total of 35 patients (age range 17-72 years, mean 42.6 years) with ventral intradural spinal pathology underwent surgery at the authors' institution.

RESULTS

There were 28 intradural extramedullary mass lesions: 15 meningiomas, 12 solitary schwannomas, and 1 neuroenteric cyst. Surgical approaches to these lesions included 23 posterior or posterolateral approaches, 4 anterior approaches with corpectomy followed by tumor resection and reconstruction, and 1 lateral transforaminal resection. No patient had evidence of instability at follow-up, which ranged from 6 months to 8 years in duration. One patient had worsened spinal cord function following surgery. There were 7 patients with intramedullary lesions: 2 hemangioblastomas, 2 cavernous malformations, 2 perimedullary fistulas, and 1 astrocytoma. All but 1 were superficial pia-based lesions arising ventral to the dentate ligament. Five of the 6 pia-based lesions were successfully resected via a standard posterior laminectomy, partial facetectomy with dentate section, and spinal cord rotation. One midline pial lesion was successfully removed with a minimally invasive retropleural thoracotomy. The astrocytoma was resected through an anterior cervical corpectomy, which was followed by instrumented reconstruction. There were no significant complications or neurological morbidity at follow-up (range 9 months-6 years).

CONCLUSIONS

Most intradural spinal lesions can be treated with contemporary microsurgical techniques with long-term control or cure of the lesion and preservation of neurological function. Standard posterior approaches provide adequate exposure to safely remove the vast majority of these lesions without the need for a potentially destabilizing resection of the facet or pedicle. Posterior exposures with varying degrees of lateral bone resection, dentate ligament division, and gentle cord rotation may also provide adequate exposure for safe removal of nonmidline ventrolateral superficial pial presenting spinal cord lesions. Nevertheless, in certain cases of ventral intradural lesions, anterior approaches are necessary and should be considered under appropriate circumstances.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, Department of Neurological Surgery, New York, New York, USA. pda9@columbia.eduNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

21495815

Citation

Angevine, Peter D., et al. "Surgical Management of Ventral Intradural Spinal Lesions." Journal of Neurosurgery. Spine, vol. 15, no. 1, 2011, pp. 28-37.
Angevine PD, Kellner C, Haque RM, et al. Surgical management of ventral intradural spinal lesions. J Neurosurg Spine. 2011;15(1):28-37.
Angevine, P. D., Kellner, C., Haque, R. M., & McCormick, P. C. (2011). Surgical management of ventral intradural spinal lesions. Journal of Neurosurgery. Spine, 15(1), 28-37. https://doi.org/10.3171/2011.3.SPINE1095
Angevine PD, et al. Surgical Management of Ventral Intradural Spinal Lesions. J Neurosurg Spine. 2011;15(1):28-37. PubMed PMID: 21495815.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Surgical management of ventral intradural spinal lesions. AU - Angevine,Peter D, AU - Kellner,Christopher, AU - Haque,Raqeeb M, AU - McCormick,Paul C, Y1 - 2011/04/15/ PY - 2011/4/19/entrez PY - 2011/4/19/pubmed PY - 2011/9/14/medline SP - 28 EP - 37 JF - Journal of neurosurgery. Spine JO - J Neurosurg Spine VL - 15 IS - 1 N2 - OBJECTIVE: Access to the ventral intradural spinal canal may be required for treatment of a variety of lesions affecting the spinal cord and adjacent intradural structures. Adequate exposure is usually achieved through a standard posterior laminectomy or posterolateral approaches, although formal anterior approaches are used to access lesions in the subaxial cervical spine. Modifications of the standard posterior exposure as well as ventral or ventrolateral approaches are increasingly being used for treating intradural spinal pathologies. In this study, the authors review their experience with 35 consecutive cases of ventral intradural spinal lesions. METHODS: Only patients with intradural lesions located completely ventral to the dentate ligament attachments were included in this retrospective study. Patients with the following lesions were excluded from the study: lesions at the level of the filum terminale/cauda equina, lesions with any component that extended dorsally to the dentate ligament, or lesions with extradural extension (that is, dumbbell tumors) below the C-2 level. Between January 2000 and September 2009, a total of 35 patients (age range 17-72 years, mean 42.6 years) with ventral intradural spinal pathology underwent surgery at the authors' institution. RESULTS: There were 28 intradural extramedullary mass lesions: 15 meningiomas, 12 solitary schwannomas, and 1 neuroenteric cyst. Surgical approaches to these lesions included 23 posterior or posterolateral approaches, 4 anterior approaches with corpectomy followed by tumor resection and reconstruction, and 1 lateral transforaminal resection. No patient had evidence of instability at follow-up, which ranged from 6 months to 8 years in duration. One patient had worsened spinal cord function following surgery. There were 7 patients with intramedullary lesions: 2 hemangioblastomas, 2 cavernous malformations, 2 perimedullary fistulas, and 1 astrocytoma. All but 1 were superficial pia-based lesions arising ventral to the dentate ligament. Five of the 6 pia-based lesions were successfully resected via a standard posterior laminectomy, partial facetectomy with dentate section, and spinal cord rotation. One midline pial lesion was successfully removed with a minimally invasive retropleural thoracotomy. The astrocytoma was resected through an anterior cervical corpectomy, which was followed by instrumented reconstruction. There were no significant complications or neurological morbidity at follow-up (range 9 months-6 years). CONCLUSIONS: Most intradural spinal lesions can be treated with contemporary microsurgical techniques with long-term control or cure of the lesion and preservation of neurological function. Standard posterior approaches provide adequate exposure to safely remove the vast majority of these lesions without the need for a potentially destabilizing resection of the facet or pedicle. Posterior exposures with varying degrees of lateral bone resection, dentate ligament division, and gentle cord rotation may also provide adequate exposure for safe removal of nonmidline ventrolateral superficial pial presenting spinal cord lesions. Nevertheless, in certain cases of ventral intradural lesions, anterior approaches are necessary and should be considered under appropriate circumstances. SN - 1547-5646 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/21495815/Surgical_management_of_ventral_intradural_spinal_lesions_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -