Abstract

Objective: This study set out to evaluate radiology's diagnostic capacity in accurately establishing a preliminary working diagnosis for various spine tumor types. Materials and Methods: This is a prospective study carried out and examined patients who had surgical resection with the collection of histopathology samples, regardless of age or gender. A full MRI examination from every angle and contrast-enhanced pictures were required. Inclusion criteria consisted of Patients of all ages of both genders, who underwent surgery a tissue sample was collected for histopathological diagnoses, and a complete MRI study with all views and contrast-enhanced images was available to give a preliminary diagnosis. Results: Based on the evaluation by the senior radiologists, the lesions were most commonly intradural-extramedullary (50%) in position according to the dura, followed by intramedullary in 14 (26.9%) patients. Despite our series having a total of 16 misdiagnosed cases, the overall diagnostic accuracy of the MRI remained high at 69.2%. Conclusion: MRI has superior diagnostic accuracy in diagnosing meningiomas as compared to nerve sheath tumors such as meningiomas. It also has good predictive accuracy of intramedullary lesions such as ependymomas.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call