Abstract

Spinal hemangioblastomas are often evaluated with catheter angiography for both workup and treatment planning. We report a unique longitudinal pulse-synchronous bouncing phenomenon observed during their angiographic evaluation and consider the association of pulse-synchronous bouncing with syringomyelia, another pathologic feature associated with hemangioblastomas. Preoperative spinal angiograms and associated MRIs obtained over a 16-year period at a single institution were retrospectively evaluated. MRI parameters included lesion and syrinx location and size. Angiograms were evaluated for bouncing phenomena. Student's t-test and Chi square test compared characteristics between groups. Linear regression analyses evaluated maximum amplitude of dynamic motion and any associated syrinx. Nineteen hemangioblastoma patients had preoperative angiograms available for review. Eight exhibited bouncing behavior. Between the dynamic and non-dynamic cohorts, there was no difference in presence or volume of syrinxes. Lesions in the dynamic cohort trended towards a cervical location (75% versus 36.3%, p=0.10). No significant correlation was found between bouncing amplitude and syrinx size (R2 = 0.023). Dural contact may be related to this dynamic behavior since other high-flow lesions like AVMs do not demonstrate this phenomenon, and AVMs are pial-based and more likely to contact stationary dura. Here, there were fewer lesions abutting the thecal sac in the dynamic cohort (50% versus 81.8%, p=0.14). Though no significant relationship was established between this bouncing behavior and syrinx formation, noted trends included a greater range of motion for cervical lesions and limited motion in tumors abutting the thecal sac.

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