1. Teaching NeuroImages: A Ruptured Lumbar Disc Mimicking Spinal Tumor
- Author
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Jung-Shun Lee, Po-Hsuan Lee, Hui-Wen Chen, Chih-Hao Tien, Chia-En Wong, Chih Yuan Huang, and Chi-Chen Huang
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Weakness ,business.industry ,Nodule (medicine) ,Low back pain ,Ankle jerk reflex ,03 medical and health sciences ,Lumbar disc ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal tumor ,medicine ,Spinal canal ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
A 47-year-old healthy man presented with intermittent low back pain radiating to the left calf; within 1 month, the pain worsened at night and disturbed his sleep. Examination showed paresthesia in left lateral calf, weakness in left ankle plantarflexion, and decreased ankle reflex. Neuroimaging revealed near-total obliteration of the spinal canal by a 2 × 1.2 cm nodule at L5-S1 level with ring enhancement under gadolinium-enhanced MRI (figure 1). The patient underwent surgery for a presumed spinal tumor. The intraoperative and pathologic findings revealed ruptured intervertebral disc without neoplasm (figure 2). The clinical presentation and image characteristics of a large ruptured disc can mimic a spinal tumor.1,2
- Published
- 2021
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