“…Capillary hemangiomas are found in the skin and soft tissues in younger people, and rarely occur in the central nervous system; more frequent they are located around or attached to nerve roots of cauda equina and conus medullaris (25), extremely rarely intradurally (16) 16,25) Clinical symptomatology at presentation is variable, depending on the size and topography, with the more frequent symptoms beeing: acute spinal pain, radiculopathy and/or myelopathy, progressive gait disturbance, slowly progressive paraparesis, or even asymptomatic -very rare, as in our case (5,18,(26)(27)(28). Cavernous hemangiomas may present in four major clinical patterns: acute episodes of step wise deterioration, slow progression, acute onset with rapid deterioration, and acute onset with gradual decline (10,12,14,15,18). Acute clinical deterioration is present in cavernous hemangiomas associated with subarachnoid hemorrhage induced by intralesional hemorrhage, lesion growth, thrombotic venous occlusion; bleedind can occur due to the thin-walled vessels, stasis of blood flow in the lesion, estrogen mediated neoangiogenesis in the lesion or drainer compression by a gravid uterus (22)(23) The MRI signal intensity and character of the spinal epidural cavernous hemangioma reflects its histopathology:…”