Syringomyelia
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Transcript Syringomyelia
THE CHIARI MALFORMATIONS AND
SYRINGOMYELIA: DEFINITIONS
Bermans J. Iskandar
Pediatric Neurosurgery
University of Wisconsin, Madison
ASAP Austin 2010
Standard
Chiari Type I
Chiari Type II
Tonsillar descent >5mm below the plane
of the foramen magnum.
Caudal descent of the vermis,
brainstem, and fourth ventricle.
No associated brainstem herniation or
supratentorial anomalies
Associated with myelomeningocele
and multiple brain anomalies
Low frequency of hydrocephalus and
syringomyelia
High frequency of hydrocephalus
and syringohydromyelia
Rare & Poor Prognosis
Chiari Type III
Chiari Type IV
Occipital encephalocele containing
Hypoplasia or aplasia of the cerebellum
Dysmorphic cerebellar and brainstem
tissue
New & Controversial
Chiari 1.5
Chiari Zero
Descent of tonsils & medulla
Idiopathic syringomyelia that
responds to craniocervical
decompression
Behaves like Chiari I
JNS:Peds 2004
JNS 1998
CHIARI I MALFORMATION
Diagnosis made on MRI
Treatment: posterior fossa
decompression.
If the syrinx does not resolve:
Re-explore the posterior fossa
and expand the decompression
Consideration of subtle
craniocervical instability
Consideration of benign
intracranial hypertension
Consideration of shunting the
syrinx directly
CHIARI I
CASE 1: BASIC SCENARIO
8 year old boy with headaches
Syrinx
1 cm tonsillar descent
CHIARI I
CASE 2: PSEUDOTUMOR CEREBRI
30 year-old with 1.5 cm tonsillar descent
and severe symptoms
Posterior fossa decompression fails
LP monitoring reveals elevated ICP
VP shunt
Symptoms resolve
CASE 3: HYDROCEPHALUS
CHIARI I
CASE 4: ACQUIRED CHIARI I
10 year-old who underwent serial lumbar
punctures for a mild viral meningitis
Develops lower cranial nerve symptoms
MRI reveals new tonsillar herniation
CHIARI I
CASE 5: CHRONIC CRANIOCERVICAL
INSTABILITY
12 year-old with Chiari I,
syringomyelia, and basilar
invagination
Posterior fossa
decompression
Symptoms and syrinx don’t
resolve until craniocervical
fusion a year later
CHIARI II MALFORMATION
Likely Etiology
In
utero CSF leak through the
myelomeningocele opening, causing
caudal traction on brain structures
Clinical Presentation
Infants:
usually asymptomatic
Children: signs of lower brainstem
compression: stridor, apnea, dysphagia,
aspiration
CHIARI II MALFORMATION
Chiari II: leading cause of death in spina
bifida patients in the recent past
30% of patients: brainstem symptoms by
age 5 (1/3 of these die)
Most dangerous period: 2-3 months of
age (sometimes up to 2 years)
CHIARI II MALFORMATION
Current understanding
VP
shunt malfunction most likely cause of
deterioration, rather than the Chiari
Ventricle size may not change
Number of Chiari II decompressions has
decreased significantly since more
aggressive shunt revisions
SYRINGOMYELIA
Fluid-filled cavity
within the spinal cord
Other nomenclature
Hydromyelia
Syringohydromyelia
Spinal
cord cyst
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Dissociated sensory loss
Central cord syndrome
Brainstem symptoms
and signs
Scoliosis
Chronic pain
DIAGNOSTIC STUDIES
Spinal MRI will show a dilated cavity with the same
intensity of CSF.
A complete brain and spinal MRI with and without
Gadolinium is needed to determine the primary
pathology.
Cine MRI may also help in diagnosing abnormal
CSF flow patterns. So far results have been
conflicting.
Rarely, myelography may help to sort some of the
more difficult cases.
TREATMENT - BASED ON ETIOLOGY
Asymptomatic patients with
small syrinx cavity and no
obvious etiology are best
managed with watchful waiting
and serial imaging
Large syrinx: Treat the cause of
the syrinx, not the syrinx itself
SPINA BIFIDA
The syrinx may be the result
Location of the syrinx within
the spinal cord may help to
dictate the treatment
Tethered cord from the
myelomenigocele repair scar
Chiari II malformation
Ventricular shunt malfunction.
Lumbar syrinx ??tethered cord
release
Cervical syrinx ?? VP shunt
revision
Check the shunt first!
CONGENITAL TETHERED CORD
(SPINA BIFIDA OCCULTA)
Diagnosis by MRI
Treatment: Tethered
cord release
If syrinx is large, it is
often drained at the
same surgery
ARACHNOIDITIS
Diagnosis made on MRI
Treatment: Dissection of the arachnoid scar
(often difficult or impossible)
Goal: Reestablish normal CSF flow
Difficulties: If the arachnoiditis is so diffuse
that it becomes impossible to achieve a good
dissection, shunt the syrinx to the pleural or
peritoneal cavities
TRAUMA
Post-traumatic syrinx is difficult
to treat successfully
Possible causes
Arachnoiditis
and blockage of flow
causing expansion of the cord, or
Atrophy long term after cord
contusion
Treatment: arachnoidal
dissection, or syrinx shunt into
the pleura or peritoneum
SPINAL CORD TUMOR
Diagnosis made on MRI
High protein content
Treatment:
Tumor
resection
It is rare to have to shunt the
syrinx in these situations.
IDIOPATHIC
NO IDENTIFIABLE CAUSE
In a large percentage of patients, the syrinx has
no identifiable cause
Difficult to treat
If
large, syrinx shunting
Rarely, posterior fossa decompression (Chiari zero)
It is so far impossible to predict which patient with
idiopathic syringomyelia would respond to posterior
fossa decompression
PROGNOSIS AND OUTCOME
SYRINGOMYELIA RESOLUTION
Chiari decompression
Spina bifida
Focal – fair prognosis
Diffuse – poor, need to shunt the syrinx
Trauma
Excellent outcome when shunt is functional
Arachnoiditis
Excellent outcome
Poor outcome for syringomyelia and pain
Tumor:
Excellent outcome for syringomyelia
Overall Prognosis depends on tumor grade
CONCLUSIONS
Standard basic definitions
Complicating factors: hydrocephalus,
pseudotumor cerebri, instability, etc.
Treatment controversies
When
to treat
What to do
When to do it
Goals: Recognize basic concepts; recognize
controversial areas; be prepared to bring these
points up with your physician