ABSTRACT
Background: Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma is an uncommon malignant variant of chondrosarcoma that mainly affects the bones and cartilaginous tissues, but may rarely involve the spine. Careful preoperative planning for surgical tumor removal and spine reconstruction is mandatory and must be based on oncologic and surgical staging. Case Description: Over 1 month, a 16-year-old female became paraplegic with a T9 sensory level and urinary dysfunction. The magnetic resonance imaging revealed an intraspinal extradural T7-T9 mass that was isointense in T1W1 and markedly enhanced with gadolinium. The patient underwent gross-total tumor resection followed by an osteoplastic laminectomy with fusion. The histological examination was consistent with a mesenchymal chondrosarcoma. She had received radiation and chemotherapy. One year later, she was readmitted for tumor recurrence with multiple metastases involving L1, the lung, and peritoneum. Despite full course of radiotherapy and chemotherapy, she died after 6 months of the second surgery. Conclusion: Total resection of mesenchymal chondrosarcomas is the gold standard for treatment and is typically followed by radiation and/or chemotherapy. However, the status of residual tumor, local extension, and or metastases best determine the overall survival which may prove extremely limited.
ABSTRACT
The white cerebellum sign is a radiologic sign rarely described resulting from diffuse cerebral edema, reported especially in children with hypoxic brain lesions, it is usually associated with poor prognosis leading to irreversible brain damage. We report the case of a child who presented this sign after a severe head injury and differently from most of previous cases, our patient has recovered very successfully. The white cerebellum sign is a radiologic sign that is not frequently described, which when present carries a poor prognosis, one third of the patients die and the others have severe deficits, its identification is necessary for a better patient management.