A rare case of Intramedullary spinal ependymoma presenting as isolated neck pain

Joint Event on 7th Edition of International Conference on Pain Management & 8th Edition of International Conference on Internal Medicine & Patient Care
March 25-26, 2019 Rome, Italy

Khushali Jhaveri

Georgetown University Washington Hospital Center, USA

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Int J Anesth Pain Med

DOI: 10.21767/2471-982X-C1-006

Abstract

A previously healthy 26 year old female presented with initial symptom of isolated neck pain. She denied any headache, nausea, vomiting, blurry vision, numbness, tingling, muscle weakness or radiating pain. She denied any fever, fatigue, joint pain, recent trauma, travel, sick contacts or changes in weight or appetite. No risk factors for HIV were identified. Patient was afebrile with normal vital signs. On physical examination, isolated neck tenderness was noted without any redness or swelling. Range of motion was preserved. Nuchal rigidity, Kernig and Brudzinki’s sign were negative. Neuro exam revealed 5/5 motor strength in all extremities and intact sensation in all dermatomes. Normal reflexes were noted. Chest, cardiovascular, abdominal and extremities examination were unremarkable. Initial laboratory examination including CBC with differential, inflammatory markers, renal and liver function were within normal limits. X-ray was done and was unremarkable. A trial of muscle relaxants was given. On non-resolution of symptoms, An MRI of the cervical spine was offered which revealed a heterogenous intramedullary lesion raising suspicion for an intramedullary neoplastic lesion. Screening of entire CNS was otherwise unremarkable. To establish a specific diagnosis, patient underwent a posterior cervical laminectomy for tumor resection. Gross-total resection was not achieved due to drop in somatosensory potentials during intraoperative monitoring. Histopathological examination showed WHO grade 2 ependymoma. Patient had no significant motor neurological impairment after surgery. However, significant sensory and proprioceptive loss was observed due to posterior spinal approach. She remains progression free at 1 year with MRI with stable residual tumor.

Biography

Khushali Jhaveri is doing her Internal medicine Residency from Georgetown University. She has done around 5 abstract/poster presentations in reputed international conferences

E-mail: khushali.jhaveri@gmail.com

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