These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Clinicopathologic Features of Thoracolumbar Interdural Disc Herniations: A Retrospective Case Series with a Systematic Literature Review.
    Author: Fiorenza V, Ascanio F, Di Lorenzo I.
    Journal: World Neurosurg; 2020 Jul; 139():e391-e398. PubMed ID: 32305597.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Transdural disc herniations represent about 0.3% of all herniated discs. Preoperative imaging rarely demonstrates this condition. Therefore, diagnosis of transdural disc herniation is usually made intraoperatively. We describe the clinicopathologic features of extremely rare cases of thoracic and lumbar interdural disc herniations mimicking spinal intradural en plaque tumors. METHODS: This is a retrospective case series with a systematic literature review. Clinical presentation, imaging, differential diagnosis, intraoperative microsurgical findings, and possible pathogenesis were reviewed according to published guidelines. All patients underwent a posterior approach for microsurgical excision of disc herniation, but no epidural lesion was found. At intradural exploration, a tumor-like en plaque lesion was discovered. The surface of the lesion was incised, and multiple friable, cartilaginous white-yellow fragments were removed to achieve complete intralesional excision. RESULTS: The postoperative course was characterized by progressive neurologic improvement in all cases. In peculiar anatomic (adhesions between the anulus fibrosus, posterior longitudinal ligament, and ventral surface of dura mater) and pathologic (calcified giant disc herniation, spinal canal stenosis, previous lumbar spine surgery) conditions, penetration of disc fragment in the thickness of spinal dura mater can occur. CONCLUSIONS: Interdural disc herniations constitute a rare pathologic condition characterized by the migration of the herniated disc in neither the epidural nor the subdural spinal space, but rather in the thickness of the spinal dura mater. Further advances are necessary in neuroradiologic investigations to achieve a correct preoperative diagnosis, which is essential, as spine surgeons must be aware of these rare pathologies.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]