Mt. Sattar et al., OCCULT SPINAL DYSRAPHISM - THE COMMON COMBINATION OF LESIONS AND THE CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS IN 50 PATIENTS, European journal of pediatric surgery, 6, 1996, pp. 10-14
Fifty patients (26 males, 24 females) aged from birth to 51 years with
occult spinal dysraphism were identified. All had Magnetic Resonance
(MR) scans carried out. The MR scans were examined to determine the ve
rtebral level of the conus and to see if one or more of the following
were present; lipoma, syrinx, dermoid, diastematomyelia, and meningoce
le. In 43 patients the conus lay below the level of L3, 23 had a lipom
a, 23 a meningocele, 20 an open central canal in the spinal cord or a
syrinx, 15 a diastematomyelia and 4 a dermoid. The commonest combinati
on of lesions was a long cord, a syrinx or an open central canal in th
e spinal cord and a lipoma. The diastematomyelias were always associat
ed with a long cord and had the highest incidence of vertebral body an
omalies (60%). The most frequent recorded signs were deformities of th
e feet, short legs, wasting of the calf muscles, weakness of the legs,
back pain and bladder dysfunction. Combinations of these occurred wit
h all of the lesions although some had none. Whilst deterioration was
seen in about half of the patients, acute deterioration was uncommon a
nd was associated most frequently with a dermoid or an expanded syrinx
.