Vertebral hemangioma coincident with metastasis of colon adenocarcinoma

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Abstract

The authors report on colon cancer metastasis to the L-3 vertebra, which had been previously found to be involved by an asymptomatic hemangioma. A 61-year-old female patient was admitted after onset of lumbar axial pain and weakness of the right quadriceps muscle. Her medical history included colon cancer that had been diagnosed 3 years earlier and was treated via a right hemicolectomy followed by chemotherapy. Presurgical imaging revealed an asymptomatic hemangioma in the L-3 vertebral body. Computed tomography and MRI of the spine were performed after admission and revealed a hemangioma in the L-3 vertebral body as well as a soft-tissue mass protruding from the L-3 vertebral body to the spinal canal. Treatment consisted of vertebroplasty of the hemangioma, left L-3 hemilaminectomy, and removal of the pathological mass from the spinal canal and the L-3 vertebral body. Histopathological examination revealed the presence of colon cancer metastasis and a hemangioma in the same vertebra.

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APA

Zapałowicz, K., Bierzyńska-Macyszyn, G., Stasiów, B., Krzan, A., Wierzycka, B., & Kopycka, A. (2016). Vertebral hemangioma coincident with metastasis of colon adenocarcinoma. Journal of Neurosurgery: Spine, 24(3), 506–509. https://doi.org/10.3171/2015.6.SPINE141205

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