Diagnosis of occipital neuralgia due to upper cervical chordoma
نویسنده
چکیده
Received June 24, 2017. Accepted June 26, 2017. Correspondence to: Young Bok Lee Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Wonju College of Medicine, Ilsanro 20, Wonju 26426, Korea Tel: +82-33-741-1536, Fax: +82-33-742-8198, E-mail: [email protected] This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Copyright c The Korean Pain Society, 2017 Chordoma is a relatively rare tumor that primarily occurs in the axial skeleton. Approximately 50% of chordoma originate from the sacrococcygeal area and 6% of chordoma arise from the cervical spine [1,2]. Chordoma originated from the cervical spine as a slowly growing tumor, which makes the tumor symptomatic at relatively later stages. Upper cervical tumors often are accidentally discovered during investigation of cervical pain or radiculopathy. The tumor causes compression of the cervical nerve roots or gives rise to referred pain in the neck due to invasion into the cervical facet joints. Occasionally, the lesion is mistaken for a facet joint pathology or cervical disc herniation. Although the tumor is histologically benign, it is clinically malignant as it infiltrates the neighboring tissues, such as bone, lymph nodes, skin, liver, and brain [3]. Upper cervical chordoma frequently becomes clinically symptomatic when it has grown considerably in size. Nerve compression or intraspinal invasion may result in severe neurologic complications. Upper cervical tumors have invaded the second cervical spine root, and neuralgia of the greater occipital nerve has led to occipital headaches. When the mass invades the atlanto-occipital joint or the zygapophysial joint of the second and third cervical vertebrae, referred pain is experienced in the lower occipital and posterior upper cervical areas. If the symptoms persist without appropriate treatment, they may progress to neuropathy. Once the neuralgia becomes a neuropathy, symptoms may persist despite tumor resection. Upper cervical chordoma is included in the diagnosis of lesions found in the upper cervical region. Imaging is particularly important for the diagnosis and management in patients with symptomatic lesions. The tumor usually shows inhomogeneous contrast enhancement of varying intensity on CT and MRI. While no imaging features are pathognomonic, the CT findings are classical for chordoma. MRI may underestimate soft tissue invasion as found on operative assessment. It should be included in the differential diagnosis for pathologic masses with symptoms. Definitive diagnosis of the chordoma requires histologic evaluation in which physaliferous cells with cytoplasmic vacuoles and positive periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) staining are observed [4].
منابع مشابه
Occipital neuralgia: symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment.
Occipital neuralgia (ON) is a relatively rare primary headache disorder (primary headache disorders are not symptoms of or caused by another condition) affecting around 3.2/100,000 people per year.1 The term “neuralgia” refers to pain in the distribution of a nerve, in this case the occipital nerves. The greater, lesser, and third occipital nerves originate from the upper cervical nerve roots, ...
متن کاملAtlantoaxial Chordoma in Two Patients with Occipital Neuralgia and Cervicalgia
Chordoma arises from cellular remnants of the notochord. It is the most common primary malignancy of the spine in adults. Approximately 50% of chordomas arise from the sacrococcygeal area with other areas of the spine giving rise to another 15% of chordomas. Following complete resection, patients can expect a 5-year survival rate of 85%. Chordoma has a recurrence rate of 40%, which leads to a l...
متن کاملHemifacial Pain and Hemisensory Disturbance Referred from Occipital Neuralgia Caused by Pathological Vascular Contact of the Greater Occipital Nerve
Here we report a unique case of chronic occipital neuralgia caused by pathological vascular contact of the left greater occipital nerve. After 12 months of left-sided, unremitting occipital neuralgia, a hypesthesia and facial pain developed in the left hemiface. The decompression of the left greater occipital nerve from pathological contacts with the occipital artery resulted in immediate relie...
متن کاملCervical chordoma involving C3/C4: A case report.
Chordoma is a rare, indolent but locally invasive, osteolytic, slow growing, low grade, primary bone malignancy, derived from the embryonic remnants of the notochord. It is a midline tumour and it predominantly emerges from the axial skeleton. The most commonly observed location of a chordoma is in the sacrococcygeal region ( 50 to 55% ) followed by the cranio occipital region ( 25 to 30% )We p...
متن کاملMR Imaging Findings of Cervical Chordoma: case report
Chordomas are rare tumors of notochordal tissue remnants and most frequently affect the sacrum and skull base. We report a case of a 58-year-old woman having cervical chordoma causing related symptoms for 5 years. MRI showed a dumbbell-shape mass with heterogeneous enhancement at C2 and C3 on postcontrast images, mimicking neurogenic tumor. Chordoma should be included in the differential diagno...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 30 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2017