Abstract

During intramedullary lesion surgery, the lesion site and the posterior median sulcus (PMS) should be accurately identified prior to myelotomy to avoid severe injury of the posterior funiculus. However, intramedullary lesions are fundamentally invisible until the myelotomy is performed. Furthermore, the PMS location is frequently unclear due to lesion-induced swelling or distortion of the spinal cord. Intraoperative indocyanine green videoangiography (ICG-VA) followed by FLOW 800 analysis, which shows vascularization of the spinal parenchyma, may provide a solution for these problems in specific cases. A 61-year-old woman suffering from claudication visited our department. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a cystic lesion at the level of Th11. A solid portion was not detected in the T1-weighted images following gadolinium administration. We made a diagnosis of ventriculus terminalis and performed a lesion resection. Prior to opening the PMS, ICG-VA was performed, which revealed an avascular area representing the intramedullary cyst. The PMS was the most avascular area observed in the time-intensity analysis executed using FLOW 800 software (Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany). Thus, it was helpful in determining the site for myelotomy, which should be performed at the center of the extent of the lesion. The patient was discharged 23 days after the operation, ambulating independently. Intraoperative ICG-VA followed by FLOW 800 analysis was applied to a case of intramedullary cystic lesion. This technique may be helpful in performing safer intramedullary cystic lesion surgery because it enables visualization of the lesion location and confirmation of the PMS.

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