AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with spinal meningiomas often experience neurological symptoms like paralysis and sensory deficits, but there's little consensus on which imaging findings predict these issues.
  • A study involving 55 patients surveyed their pre-surgery symptoms, such as muscle weakness and sensory disturbances, using medical records and imaging results to categorize them based on severity and tumor characteristics.
  • Results showed that tumor size and length in the sagittal plane were linked to paralysis, while other factors like symptom duration also correlated with sensory disturbances, highlighting the importance of tumor evaluation before treatment.

Article Abstract

Background: Patients with spinal meningioma may present preoperatively with paralysis and sensory deficits. However, there is a paucity of detailed evaluations and a lack of consensus regarding imaging findings that are predictive of neurological symptoms in patients with spinal meningioma.

Methods: Herein, a total of 55 patients who underwent surgical resection of spinal meningiomas in eight hospitals between 2011 and 2021 were enrolled. Patient characteristics, degree of muscle weakness, sensory disturbances, and the presence of bowel/bladder dysfunction (BBD) before surgical treatment were evaluated using medical records. Patients with American Spinal Injury Impairment Scale grades A-C and the presence of BBD were classified into the paralysis (+) group. Patients with sensory disturbances were assigned to the sensory disturbance (+) group. Based on magnetic resonance (MR) and computed tomography images, the tumor location was classified according to the spinal level and its attachment to the dura mater. To evaluate tumor size, the tumor occupation ratio (OR) was calculated using the area and distance measurement method in horizontal MR images, and the maximum length and area of the tumor in the sagittal plane were measured.

Results: Of all patients, 85 % were women. The mean age of patients at surgery was 69.7 years. Twenty-eight (51 %) and 41 (75 %) patients were classified into the paralysis (+) and sensory disturbance (+) groups, respectively. The average tumor length and area in the sagittal plane were 19.6 mm and 203 mm, respectively; OR-area and diameters were 70.3 % and 72.3 %, respectively. In univariate analyses, tumor length and area in the sagittal plane were significant risk factors for paralysis. OR-diameter, symptom duration, and a low MIB-1 index correlated with sensory disturbances. Multivariate logistic regression analysis demonstrated that the area and length of the tumor in the sagittal plane were significantly correlated with paralysis, whereas the OR-diameter and symptom duration significantly correlated with sensory disturbances. The cut-off values for the area and length of the tumor in the sagittal plane to predict paralysis were 243 mm and 20.1 mm, respectively.

Conclusions: Preoperative paralysis in patients with spinal meningiomas was significantly associated with sagittal tumor size than with high tumor occupancy in the horizontal plane. Sensory disturbances were associated with high occupancy in the horizontal plane. Patients with spinal meningiomas > 20 mm in length or 243 mm in area in the sagittal plane are at risk of developing paralysis and could be considered for surgery even in the absence of paralysis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jocn.2024.06.021DOI Listing

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