Abstract
Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF-1) is an autosomal-dominant disorder affecting 1 in 3000 individuals worldwide. NF-1 is characterized by café-au-lait macules and peripheral nerve sheath tumors. Patients with NF-1 frequently exhibit bony dysplasia, including spinal deformities such as scoliosis or kyphosis, pseudarthrosis of the tibia, and soft tissue tumors. Some patients with NF-1 exhibit spinal changes, including acutely angled cervical kyphosis. Prior studies have also described arteriovenous (AV) fistulas in individuals with NF-1, as well as a predisposition to cervical fistulas which display symptoms secondary to mass effect, rather than hemorrhage. Sometimes, fistulas are incidentally detected during evaluations for cervical kyphotic deformities. The case herein describes a patient with NF-1 who exhibited a severe cervical spinal kyphotic deformity and a vertebral AV fistula. The patient initially presented with neck pain that radiated to all four limbs and resulted in limb weakness. Spinal kyphosis is common in patients with NF-1, and if dystrophic changes are noted on plain radiographs, MRI should be considered for the further survey of potential spinal vascular lesions.
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