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🧒 Pediatric Spinal Cavernous Malformation
A Pediatric Spinal Cavernous Malformation (SCM) is a rare vascular lesion of the spinal cord in children, composed of dilated, thin-walled vascular channels without intervening normal neural tissue.
🧠 Pathophysiology
SCMs consist of:
- Compact clusters of sinusoidal capillaries
- Thin walls lacking smooth muscle and elastin
- No arterial supply; low-flow lesion
- Often associated with microhemorrhages and hemosiderin deposits
📊 Epidemiology
- Extremely rare in children
- More common in adults (peak: 30–50 years)
- Pediatric cases may present earlier due to larger lesions or genetic predisposition
🧬 Etiology
- Sporadic: Most pediatric cases
- Familial: Linked to *CCM1*, *CCM2*, or *CCM3* gene mutations (often multiple lesions)
- May coexist with cerebral cavernous malformations (CCM)
🧍 Clinical Presentation
- Progressive myelopathy
- Sudden neurological decline due to hemorrhage
- Pain (back or radicular)
- Weakness, sensory loss
- Bowel/bladder dysfunction
- Sometimes incidental finding
🧪 Diagnosis
- MRI with and without contrast:
- “Popcorn” or “mulberry” appearance
- Mixed signal intensity (T1/T2) with hemosiderin ring (T2 hypointensity)
- Gradient echo or SWI: sensitive to hemorrhage
- No enhancement or mild enhancement post-Gd
🩺 Differential Diagnosis
- Ependymoma
- Astrocytoma
- Hemangioblastoma
- Spinal arteriovenous malformations (AVMs)
- Lipomas or dermoids
⚖️ Management
- Observation if asymptomatic or mild stable symptoms
- Surgical resection:
- Indicated for progressive deficits or recurrent hemorrhage
- Best done with neurophysiological monitoring
- Gross total resection is curative
- Radiosurgery: not typically used due to spinal cord risk
📈 Prognosis
- Favorable with early diagnosis and complete resection
- Risk of rebleed if untreated (especially in symptomatic cases)
- Long-term monitoring recommended (especially in familial forms)
📚 References
- Gross BA, Du R. Spinal Cavernous Malformations: Clinical features and surgical outcomes. *Neurosurg Focus*. 2010.
- Labauge P et al. Genetics of cavernous angiomas. *Lancet Neurol*. 2007.
- Wang X, et al. Pediatric spinal cavernous malformations: A review. *Childs Nerv Syst*. 2020.