학술논문

Arterioectatic Spinal Angiopathy of Childhood: Clinical, Imaging, Laboratory, Histologic, and Genetic Description of a Novel CNS Vascular Pathology
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Neuroradiology. 43(7)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Pediatric
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Neurodegenerative
Rare Diseases
Traumatic Head and Spine Injury
Spinal Cord Injury
Neurosciences
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Neurological
Angiography
Child
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Retrospective Studies
Spinal Cord
Spinal Cord Diseases
Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Clinical sciences
Physical chemistry
Language
Abstract
Pediatric patients with myelopathy expressing intradural spinal vascular ectasia without arteriovenous shunting were studied at four tertiary referral neuropediatric centers. Patients were identified by retrospective review of institutional records and excluded if spinal vascular pathology could be classified into a previously described category of spinal vascular malformation. Four patients meeting the study criteria were enrolled in the study. Clinical, magnetic resonance imaging, catheter-directed angiography, laboratory, histological and genetic data were analyzed to characterize the disease process and elucidate underlying pathomechanisms. Our study revealed a highly lethal, progressive multi-segmental myelopathy associated with a unique form of non-inflammatory spinal angiopathy featuring diffuse enlargement and tortuosity of spinal cord arteries, spinal cord hyperemia, and spinal cord edema (Arterioectatic Spinal Angiopathy of Childhood). The condition was shown to mimic venous congestive myelopathy associated with pediatric spinal cord arteriovenous shunts on MRI but to have distinct pathognomonic findings on catheter-directed angiography. Clinicopathological, genetic, and neuroimaging features, which are described in detail, closely overlap with those of mitochondrial disease.