Interdisciplinary Neurosurgery (Dec 2017)

Sporadic NF2 Mosaic: Multiple spinal schwannomas presenting with severe, intractable pain following pregnancy

  • Jeffrey H. Zimering,
  • Bryan D. Choi,
  • Matthew J. Koch,
  • John C. Dewitt,
  • Anat Stemmer-Rachamimov,
  • John H. Shin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. 142 – 145

Abstract

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The aim of the present paper is to report undiagnosed sporadic neurofibromatosis type 2 presenting with symptomatic compressive spinal tumors following pregnancy. A 36-year-old woman experienced progressive, severe lumbar radicular pain in the second trimester of pregnancy which became intractable soon after delivery. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a complex heterogeneous hypointense mass lesion around the conus. There were two small punctate lesions in the cauda equina suggestive of myxopapillary ependymoma with ‘drop metastases.’ The patient underwent surgical resection of two cystic compressive conus masses. Her low back pain improved after surgery. The masses were consistent with cystic/cellular schwannomas. An incidental finding was of a small, low-grade spinal ependymoma which lacked the characteristic histologic features of myxopapillary ependymoma. Multiple, large cystic schwannomas are not uncommon in schwannomatosis, however, the co-occurrence of low-grade ependymoma strongly suggests a clinical diagnosis of new, sporadic neurofibromatosis type 2. Although cranial nerve schwannomas (orbital, auditory) have been reported to enlarge during pregnancy, to our knowledge, this is the first report of multiple cystic/cellular schwannomas causing severe pain (due to conus compression) during and immediately after pregnancy. Keywords: Segmental schwannomatosis, Neurofibromatosis type 2, Pregnancy, Ependymoma