Intramedullary spinal metastasis

Case contributed by Henry Knipe
Diagnosis probable

Presentation

Lower limb weakness and sensory change.

Patient Data

Age: 50 years
Gender: Female

Intramedullary lumbar cord lesion at the level of T12/L1 is low T2 signal, high T2 signal with vivid near homogeneous enhancement. No significant surrounding edema or cord expansion with some minor cord hyperintensity inferiorly.

No T2 flow voids or hemosiderin staining. Solitary lesion with no other abnormal cord or leptomeningeal enhancement.

Case Discussion

There is a relatively long list of intramedullary spinal cord lesions but most are glial in origins such as ependymoma (60%) and astrocytomas (30%). Other non-glial tumors include hemangioblastoma as well as lymphoma, metastasis and other rarer tumors. 

Based on the imaging appearances with vivid enhancement and no other distinctive imaging features the main differential is between ependymoma and metastasis. The key information is that this patient has a history of breast cancer with intracranial metastases (with similar MRI characteristics) and was being treated with steroids. This perhaps accounts for the lack of edema that normally surrounds intramedullary metastases. 

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