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Spinal Teratoma with Recurrent Epileptic Episodes in Adults: A Case Report. | LitMetric

Spinal Teratoma with Recurrent Epileptic Episodes in Adults: A Case Report.

Case Rep Neurol

Department of Orthopedics Center, Affiliated Qingyuan Hospital, Qingyuan People's Hospital, The Sixth Clinical Medical School, Guangzhou Medical University, Qingyuan, China.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Spinal teratomas are a rare type of tumor, making up only about 0.2-0.5% of all spinal tumors and 2% of teratomas, and they typically do not cause epilepsy unless they rupture.
  • A case involving a 31-year-old male patient showed that a teratoma in the conus medullaris was linked to his epileptic seizures, which persisted despite treatment until surgical removal of the tumor.
  • Following surgery, the patient's seizures stopped, and the study suggests that spinal MRIs can assist in diagnosing unexplained seizures in patients with spinal deformities, improving outcomes with appropriate treatment.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Spinal teratomas are rare, accounting for nearly 0.2-0.5% of all spinal tumors and 2% of all teratomas. Teratomas at the conus medullaris location do not inherently lead to epilepsy. However, potential epileptic seizures are caused when teratoma ruptures and the chemical stimulation of teratoma components enter the dural sac.

Case Presentation: A 31-year-old Asian male patient suffering from epileptic onset and poor antiepileptic treatment was demonstrated. The spinal imaging examination was performed, and the patient suffered a space-occupying lesion within the conus medullaris related to spinal deformity, spinal embolism, etc. The autoimmune encephalitis spectrum revealed mGluR5 antibody IgG (+) 1:10 response. The patient stabilized after treatment with hormones and human immunoglobulin. Some hair and lipid droplets could be observed in the dural sac intraoperatively, and more hair and lipid-like material were present in the spinal cord. Postoperative pathology established the diagnosis as a conus medullaris teratoma in adults. Epileptic seizures stopped after surgery, and no additional seizures were reported during the 33-month follow-up period.

Conclusions: Conus medullaris teratoma rupture in adults rarely causes epileptic seizures. For spinal deformity patients with unexplained epileptic symptoms, spinal MRI can be helpful in early diagnosis, and more appropriate treatment improves disease prognosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11521525PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000541522DOI Listing

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