Illustrative resection of mixed intra- and extramedullary thoracic spinal cord capillary hemangioma

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Abstract

Background: Capillary hemangiomas are typically superficial benign tumors of the cutaneous and mucosal tissues of the face and neck in pediatric patients. In adults, they typically occur in middle-aged males who present with pain, myelopathy, radiculopathy, paresthesias, and bowel/bladder dysfunction. The optimal treatment for intramedullary spinal cord capillary hemangiomas is gross total/en bloc resection. Methods: Here, we present a 63-year-old male with increasing right greater than left lower extremity numbness/ weakness, attributed to a T8-9 mixed intra- and extramedullary capillary hemangioma. Results: One year following complete lesion resection, the patient used an assistive device to ambulate and continued to improve neurologically. Conclusion: We presented a 63-year-old male whose paraparesis was attributed to a T8-9 mixed intra- and extramedullary capillary hemangioma who did well following total en bloc lesion resection. In addition to this case study/technical note, we provide a 2-D intraoperative video detailing the resection technique.

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Protas, M., Ojukwu, D. I., Draytsel, D. Y., & Galgano, M. A. (2023). Illustrative resection of mixed intra- and extramedullary thoracic spinal cord capillary hemangioma. Surgical Neurology International, 14. https://doi.org/10.25259/sni_402_2023

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