J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  2004 Aug;36(2):135-137.

Gamma-Knife Radiosurgery of Upper Cervical Spinal Cord Tumor

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosurgery, Inje University Busan Paik Hospital, Busan, Korea. 667196@hanmail.net

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
The lower limit of gamma knife radiosurgery is considered as foramen magnum. The head is long and narrow in western people, however, the head is short and wide in oriental people. In microcephalic oriental person, gamma knife radiosurgery is tried for the upper cervical cord tumor. METHODS: We have treated seven patients of upper cervical cord tumor with Gamma-plan during the last 8 years. The seven patients consisted of one man and six women, and ages ranging from 25 to 67 years. The histologic diagnoses were cervicomedullary hemangioblastoma in two, meningioma in two, brain stem glioma extending to C2 in one, hemangioma in one, glomus jugulare tumor in one. Preradiosurgical surgical intervention was performed in three patients. Mean marginal dose was 10.8Gy. RESULTS: The median follow-up period was 40 months (12-51 months). Four tumor had markedly decreased in size on follow-up magnetic resonance image. The remaining four cases were stationary in size. There was no complication. CONCLUSION: In microcehalic or normocephalic oriental person, the lower limit of gamma knife radiosurgery is level of second cervical spine.

Keyword

Gamma knife radiosurgery; Foramen magnum; Cervical cord 2nd

MeSH Terms

Brain Stem
Diagnosis
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Foramen Magnum
Glioma
Glomus Jugulare Tumor
Head
Hemangioblastoma
Hemangioma
Humans
Meningioma
Radiosurgery*
Spinal Cord Neoplasms*
Spinal Cord*
Spine
Full Text Links
  • JKNS
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr