1. Thoracic dorsal arachnoid web with rapid onset of symptoms: A report of two cases and brief review of the literature
- Author
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Jay Thompson, Christine Duttlinger, Kevin Watford, Tripp Hines, Greg R. Wheeler, Benjamin Motley, and Catherine Y. Wang
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Weakness ,Cord ,Radiography ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thoracic ,Case Report ,Review ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Myelopathy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dorsal ,medicine ,Syrinx (medicine) ,business.industry ,Laminectomy ,Sensory loss ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Spine ,Arachnoid web ,Rapid onset ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Thoracic arachnoid webs are a rare entity and can be challenging to diagnose with sometimes subtle radiographic findings. Arachnoid webs can cause severe cord compression with associated syrinx and resulting myelopathy, weakness, sensory loss, and bowel/bladder dysfunction. There have been a little over 60 cases total reported in the literature with only one systematic review. The cases presented here have unique features including rapid onset of symptoms, symptomatic syrinx extending into the cervical spine, and intraoperative syrinx drainage, all of which are quite rare in the current published literature for arachnoid webs. Case Description: Here, we present two patients, a 73-year-old man and 58-year-old man presenting with different symptoms and timing of symptom progression but both with “scalpel sign” and associated syrinx present on their MRIs. Each patient underwent a laminectomy with resection of arachnoid web with complete resolution of symptoms in the first case and significant improvement in the second case. Postoperative imaging in both cases showed almost complete resolution of the syrinx. Conclusion: Early clinical evaluation and workup followed by early surgical treatment can lead to dramatic improvement in outcomes after surgery. For patients that are symptomatic from an associated syrinx, a midline myelotomy to facilitate drainage can be considered to be done concomitantly with the arachnoid web resection.
- Published
- 2021