We report one case of spontaneous thoracic spinal cord herniation presenting with a progressive spastic paraparesis for 4 years in a 55 years old man. From preoperative MRI, showing a ventrally displaced atrophic spinal cord at T2-T3 level, a dorsal intradural arachnoid cyst was suspected. At operation, after a 3 level laminectomy, no arachnoid cyst was found and spinal cord herniation into a meningeal diverticulum was confirmed. The herniated myelon was replaced intradurally and the lumen of the diverticulum was filled with Teflon settled with fibrin glue to prevent recurrence. Postoperatively some neurological recovery was achieved. The literature was reviewed, regarding clinical and epidemiological features, proposed pathophysiological mechanisms, treatment options and outcome. Only 32 surgically proved cases of thoracic spinal cord herniation with no past history of spine trauma, injury or surgery were found.
According to reports in the literature traumatic interhemispheric subdural haematomas (I.S.H.) are supposed to present acutely or subacutely with contralateral monoparesis of a lower extremity or hemiparesis or in bilateral haematomas even with paraparesis, and to need early operative evacuation. In our series of 5 cases none of them followed this "classical" clinical picture, and three of them recovered without operation. We conclude that the indication for operative evacuation depends on the clinical course and that in patients with spontaneously improving symptomatology non-surgical management under close supervision may be the better solution. Also the C.T. finding of open convexity cisterns may be possible indication for conservative management.
In most cases, trigeminal neuralgia is due to compression of the trigeminal nerve in the zone of entrance at the pons by vascular structures. About 1% of cases, have trigeminal neuralgia associated with the presence of ipsilateral lesion of cerebellar-pontine angle. Rarely, trigeminal neuralgia may be due to contralateral posterior fossa tumors. We present a case of a 37-year- old patient who presented with right trigeminal neuralgia and harboured a left acoustic neuroma of significant dimension. Facial pain completely disappeared after tumor removal.
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