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Hemangioblastoma (HAB) is a benign, richly vascularized tumor that accounts for 2-6% of all spinal cord neoplasms and ranks third in the structure of intramedullary space-occupying lesions of the spinal cord. Hemangioblastoma may occur sporadically or, in approximately 30% of cases, as part of the clinical picture of a hereditary disease, von Hippel-Lindau disease. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of stereotactic irradiation of hemangioblastomas of the spinal localization in patients with sporadic and von Hippel-Lindau-associated hemangioblastomas The results of stereotactic radiotherapy were evaluation of 210 spinal hemangioblastomas in 74 patients.

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Background: Hemangioblastomas are highly vascularized tumors that may be associated with extensive architecture of the surrounding pathological vessels. The distinction between feeding arteries and draining veins is usually not obvious during microsurgical en-bloc tumor resection. The aim of this investigation is to provide recommendations in which hemangioblastomas intraoperative indocyanine green (ICG) videoangiography might be beneficial for safe en-bloc tumor resection.

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Presentation of lumbar intramedullary cavernous hemangioma by spindle-shaped hematoma sign on the spinal MRI: a case report.

J Med Case Rep

November 2024

Department of Neurology, Taiyuan Central Hospital, Shanxi Medical University, No.5, Three Lanes East Road, Taiyuan, 030000, China.

Article Synopsis
  • Cavernous hemangioma is a rare congenital vascular lesion primarily found in the brain but can also occur in the spinal cord, as illustrated by a case involving a 34-year-old Chinese man with lumbar intramedullary cavernous hemangioma.
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Epithelioid hemangioma (EH) is an uncommon, benign vascular tumor of mesenchymal origin. It mainly presents as a tumor with a lytic appearance and septations. However, no case reports have documented the predominantly sclerotic appearance of EH.

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  • Cavernous hemangiomas (cavernomas) are benign vascular malformations often found in the central nervous system, primarily in the brain, but can also occur in the spine, notably in the cauda equina, which is rare.
  • A case study details a 69-year-old woman with low back pain and sciatica, where MRI revealed an intradural mass at the L1-L2 level, later confirmed as a cavernous hemangioma after surgical resection.
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