Intramedullary Masses of the Spinal Cord: Radiologic-Pathologic Correlation
Robert Shih, Kelly K. Koeller
Abstract
and a few additional congenital-developmental entities. Radiologists can add value by providing a reasonable preoperative differential diagnosis for the patient and neurosurgeon, in many cases by favoring the most common conditions, and in other cases by identifying radiologic features that may point toward a less common entity. Some of the less common entities include intramedullary myxopapillary ependymoma, spinal subependymoma, and spinal hemangioblastoma. Whenever possible, the characteristic imaging features and locations of these tumors are explained or traced back to the underlying cell of origin and findings seen at histopathologic examination.See discussion on this article by Buch.
Topics & Concepts
MedicineEpendymomaHemangioblastomaSpinal cordNeurosurgeryPilocytic astrocytomaDifferential diagnosisAstrocytomaIntramedullary rodSpinal Cord NeoplasmPathologyPathologicalRadiologyCentral nervous systemGliomaMagnetic resonance imagingSurgeryEndocrinologyPsychiatryCancer researchGlioma Diagnosis and TreatmentVascular Malformations Diagnosis and TreatmentSarcoma Diagnosis and Treatment