Spontaneous Regression Of An Incidental Spinal Meningioma
Yilmaz, A., Kizilay, Z., Sair, A., Avcil, M., & Ozkul, A. (2016). spontaneous Regression of an Incidental Spinal Meningioma. Open access Macedonian journal of medical sciences, 4(1), 128–130. https://doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2016.005
View Original Source →Abstract
The regression of meningioma has been reported in literature before. In spite of the fact that the regression may be involved by hemorrhage, calcification or some drugs withdrawal, it is rarely observed spontaneously. We report a 17 year old man with a cervical meningioma which was incidentally detected. In his cervical MRI an extradural, cranio-caudal contrast enchanced lesion at C2-C3 levels of the cervical spinal cord was detected. Despite the slight compression towards the spinal cord, he had no symptoms and refused any kind of surgical approach. The meningioma was followed by control MRI and it spontaneously regressed within six months. There were no signs of hemorrhage or calcification. Although it is a rare condition, the clinicians should consider that meningiomas especially incidentally diagnosed may be regressed spontaneously.
Case Details
Disease Location
Extradural c2-c3 meningioma
Personal Characteristics
17-year-old male
Clinical Characteristics
Presented with dizziness. Incidentally found to have 38 mm x 11. 8mm cervical meningioma. No perightinent sings or symptoms and placed on close follow up.
Remission Characteristics
MRI at 3 months showed regression to 35mm x 6mm. At 6 months - complete regression.
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Apoptosis, immune mediated