We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Dorsal root ganglionectomy for pseudotumor of the L3 dorsal root ganglion: a rare case and a rare treatment.
- Authors
Tekkök, Ismail H.; Ruacan, Şevket; Tekkök, Ismail H; Ruacan, Sevket
- Abstract
Dorsal root ganglia are oval enlargements on the dorsal nerve roots and contain the cell bodies of sensory neurons. Asymmetry of dorsal root ganglia may occur naturally, yet natural occurrence of gigantic dorsal root ganglion (DRG) is rare. The patient was 61-year-old woman who presented with atypical symptoms like neuropathic pain and urinary distention. Neuroimaging has shown left L3-4 far-lateral disc herniation and a gigantic L3 DRG. At surgery, the dural sheath of the ganglion had to be opened and a firm, yellow-colored abnormal tissue was exposed. The abnormal tissue considered to be a tumor of neural origin was gross totally excised and the patient's symptoms ceased immediately after surgery. Histopathological examination of the specimen revealed nothing more than normal DRG morphology. At 4 months postoperatively, the patient is well with mild L3 hyperesthesia and hyperalgesia. Dural sheath opening in neurosurgery is not a routine practice. The sheath may need to be opened when surgeon suspects of a tumor, a free disc fragment and any inflammation within the ganglion. Operative morphology of a severely edematous but non-tumoral (pseudotumor) ganglion has not previously been documented.
- Subjects
SPINAL ganglia; SPINAL nerve roots; MICROSURGERY; NEUROSURGERY; SENSORY neurons; LUMBAR vertebrae; LUMBOSACRAL region
- Publication
European Spine Journal, 2006, Vol 15, p610
- ISSN
0940-6719
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1007/s00586-006-0093-0