An 18-year-old male was admitted with severe back pain and inability to move both his lower limbs for the past two months. Back pain was insidious in onset, progressive and pain was present during rest. Two months back, patient noticed weakness of both lower limbs while walking which progressed to complete inability to move both lower limbs for the past one month. Patient gave history of intermittent low grade fever and weight loss in the past two months. He also gave history of bowel and bladder incontinence for the past one month. There was no contact history for tuberculosis. He had tenderness in the lower back and neurological examination revealed Grade 0 power in both lower limbs with hypotonia. Sensory loss started from mid thigh to involve the legs, ankles and feet of both lower limbs. The knee jerk and ankle jerk were absent and there was no response for plantar reflex. Patient had stage three pressures sore over his sacrum. His hemoglobin was 10.5 gm% with increase in the total WBC count and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Other laboratory investigations were normal.His radiographs showed no significant abnormality, MRI [ Fig-4] showed hyperintense T2 signal from L4 body with soft tissue enhancement involving both the psoas muscles, fluid collection in the paraspinal muscles and an extension into the spinal canal from L2 to L5 vertebrae causing a complete block in the myelogram. The disc spaces were normal and there were no skip lesions on the MRI. The radiologist had given a differential diagnosis with infective spondylitis being the first diagnosis and malignant pathology being the subsequent diagnosis.Patient was taken up for posterior spinal surgery, through a posterior midline incision L2 to L5 vertebra were exposed and there was frank pus in the paraspinal region which was collected for culture and sensitivity. Decompressive laminectomy was performed at L3 and L4 vertebra to enter the spinal canal. There was a layer of granulation tissue covering the dura as in tuberculosis pathology, which was carefully separated from the dura and sent for histopathological analysis. Transpedicular bone sample obtained from L4 vertebra and was sent for histopathological analysis. The levels were stabilized Postoperatively the patient had good pain relief and was made to sit up with a brace on the second postop day. Neurology was reassesed and the motor power in both lower limbs were zero and sensory loss remained the same too. However, the patient had full recovery of bowel and bladder function.
HistopatHology Microscopic DescriptionSections show fibrocollagenous stroma and skeletal muscle fibres infiltrated by a malignant neoplasm arranged in diffuse sheaths, nests and pseudo acinar pattern. Ewing's sarcoma is a primary malignancy of the bone affecting individuals in the second decade of life. Primary sarcomas of the spine are rare and the occurrence of Primary Ewing's sarcoma in the spine is very rare. Ewing's sarcoma occurring in the spine is divided into two types, Ewing's sarcoma of sacral spine which are v...