[Intramedullary spinal cord metastasis of lung adenocarcinoma causing Brown-Séquard Syndrome].

2001 
: A 36-year-old woman admitted to our hospital because of numbness in the left limbs and weakness in the right arm, and was subsequently given a diagnosis of intramedullary spinal cord metastases from lung cancer. The patient had lung adenocarcinoma with metastases to the brain, spine and lymph nodes. Occipital craniotomy, radiation therapy and chemotherapy were performed on the lesions in the year following June 1994. In June 1995, however, she complained of numbness in the left limbs and weakness in the right arm. Compatible with her neurological manifestation, MRI demonstrated tumors in the right side of the cord at the spinal level of C3-4 and C7-Th1, both of which were of high density in T2-enhanced conditions with enhancement by gadolinium-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid. No invasion from spinal metastasis was detected by CT, scintigraphy or MRI. We therefore diagnosed her manifestation as Brown-Sequard syndrome caused by intramedullary spinal cord metastatic tumors of lung adenocarcinoma. In order to avoid paraplegia and dysfunction of the bladder and bowel, radiation therapy of the cord lesions with total dose of 44 Gy was performed. Her neurologic manifestation was improved, restoring her quality of life, as the tumor size estimated by MRI decreased. Four months later, however, she died of lung adenocarcinoma that developed accompanied with severe peritonitis carcinomatosa and multiple metastases.
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