Abstract

Extensive multifocal intradural lesions in children present a formidable challenge. This surgical video illustrates our management of a 14-yr=old boy with two intradural mass lesions on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): one at T2-5 and the other from T12 through the sacral cul-de-sac. In a single procedure, we performed a T2-5 laminectomy and laminoplasty and T12-sacrum laminectomy for tumor resection. For reconstruction, we performed complete laminoplasty at all levels with supplementation at the thoracolumbar junction via T11-L2 posterior spinal fixation and allograft placement for fusion. In this video, we illustrate the microsurgical challenges of intradural tumor resection in both the thoracic cord and amidst the cauda equina. In young patients, prevention of postsurgical spinal deformity is of paramount concern. We discuss considerations for long-segment spinal stabilization in an adolescent and describe our decision-making to perform stabilization at the thoracolumbar junction to supplement laminoplasty while preserving function. The patient and their family consented to the procedure. Image of the article at 0:51 is from McGirt et al, Short-term progressive spinal deformity following laminoplasty versus laminectomy for resection of intradural spinal tumors: analysis of 239 patients, Neurosurgery, 2010, 66(5), 1005-1012, by permission of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.

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