Waste not, want not: Report of a completely calcified C1-C2 juxtafacet cyst and literature review.

Journal: Surgical Neurology International
Published:
Abstract

Background: Calcified juxtafacet cysts in the cervical spine are extremely rate. Such symptomatic cysts commonly cause neck pain, radiculopathy, or even myelopathy. MR and CT studies typically document cord/ root compression. On occasion, some of these cysts will spontaneously regress, while many others may warrant surgical removal.

Methods: A 70-year-old male presented with a 2-year history of a progressive tetraparesis. The preoperative MR/CT studies showed a C1-C2 left extradural mass occupying more than half of the spinal canal. On MR, it was homogeneously hypointense on both T1- and T2-weighted images, while the CT showed a calcified cyst. Intraoperative and histopathological findings documented a calcified cervical juxtafacet cyst (i.e. ganglion subtype) that was fully excised without sequelae.

Conclusions: C1-C2 juxtafacet cervical cyst should be considered when a patient presents with myelopathy due to a calcified MR/CT documented paraspinal lesion contributing to significant cervical cord/root compression.

Authors
Luca Ruggeri, Lara Brunasso, Giovanni Urrico, Raffaele Alessandrello, Giovanni Cinquemani, Rita Lipani, Jaime Mandelli, Francesco Nobile, Domenico Iacopino, Rosario Maugeri
Relevant Conditions

Ganglion Cyst