Correlation of spinal cord injury with development of spinal arachnoid cysts: Two case reports

Authors

  • Katrien Raes
  • Kristine M. Oostra

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/20030711-1000066

Keywords:

arachnoid cyst, spinal cord injuries, spinal cord compression

Abstract

Background: Spinal arachnoid cysts are rare entities, which are composed of a duplication in the arachnoid membrane and resultant cerebrospinal fluid collection, which may present with a progressive myelopathy. The most common symptoms caused by spinal cord compression are paraesthesia, neuropathic pain, paresis and gait ataxia. Clinical cases: We report here 2 cases from different perspectives of a spinal arachnoid cysts in spinal cord injury. The first case was the occurrence of a spinal cord injury due to compression of a spinal arachnoid cysts causing myelopathy. The second case is a patient who had a traumatic paraplegia for which stabilizing surgery was required and who subsequently developed a spinal arachnoid cysts with neuropathic pain. Both cases required surgery with immediate improvement. However, after a few months both patients needed a revision due to recurrence. Conclusion: Spinal arachnoid cysts may present with a heterogeneous clinical picture. If cysts are not clinically apparent, a conservative treatment with careful observation can be a justifiable option. In patients with progressive symptoms, surgery is the gold standard of care. However, the literature describes the need for revision surgery in only 12.5% of cases. Regular follow-up is necessary because both of the patients reported here needed revision surgery.

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Published

2021-08-26

How to Cite

Raes, K., & M. Oostra, K. (2021). Correlation of spinal cord injury with development of spinal arachnoid cysts: Two case reports. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - Clinical Communications, 4, 1–3. https://doi.org/10.2340/20030711-1000066

Issue

Section

Case Report