Anomalia disráfica rara caracterizada por uma conexão persistente entre o tecido neural e a pele sobrejacente. A conexão em forma de haste consiste num trato fibroneural (composto principalmente por tecido mesenquimatoso fibroso atenuado e elementos neuronais sem revestimento epitelial) conectando a lesão cutânea à superfície dorsal subjacente da medula espinhal. A haste fibroneural varia em espessura e complexidade e passa pela fáscia profunda, uma lâmina bífida/o ligamento interespinhoso e a dura. Pode estar associada a anomalias do filo. A malformação de Chiari II não está presente.
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Anomalia disráfica rara caracterizada por uma conexão persistente entre o tecido neural e a pele sobrejacente. A conexão em forma de haste consiste num trato fibroneural (composto principalmente por tecido mesenquimatoso fibroso atenuado e elementos neuronais sem revestimento epitelial) conectando a lesão cutânea à superfície dorsal subjacente da medula espinhal. A haste fibroneural varia em espessura e complexidade e passa pela fáscia profunda, uma lâmina bífida/o ligamento interespinhoso e a dura. Pode estar associada a anomalias do filo. A malformação de Chiari II não está presente.
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Publicações mais relevantes
Prenatal Diagnosis to Postnatal Outcomes of Saccular Forms of Closed Spina Dysraphism: A Single Center Retrospective Study.
To describe prenatal imaging findings and postnatal outcomes in fetuses diagnosed with saccular forms of closed spinal dysraphism (CSD). This retrospective single-centre study included fetuses diagnosed with non-genetic, non-syndromic CSD between January 2018 and June 2023. Prenatal ultrasound and MRI findings were reviewed, with postnatal outcomes assessed in those managed expectantly, focusing on neurosurgical interventions, motor function, and urologic and bowel outcomes. Eighteen cases were identified; twelve opted for expectant management and had postnatal follow-up. The most common lesion was dysraphic spinal cord lipoma (10/18, 55.6%), followed by limited dorsal myeloschisis (3/18, 16.7%), myelocystocele (3/18, 16.7%) and meningocele (2/18, 11.0%). Chiari malformation and related brain abnormalities were absent at the time of diagnosis in all cases. Most fetuses (88.9%, 16/18) had a low-lying conus medullaris, and 70.6% (12/17) had a sac wall thickness ≥ 2 mm. Postnatally, 75% (9/12) underwent surgical detethering. At ≥ 30 months, all children could walk independently with or without orthoses. However, urologic complications were common in children age ≥ 48 months: 80% (4/5) required clean intermittent catheterization (CIC), 60% (3/5) had urinary incontinence, and 40% (2/5) experienced bowel incontinence. Prenatal imaging features at the lesion level are key for diagnosing CSD. While motor outcomes are favorable, urologic and bowel dysfunctions are frequent in postnatal life.
Cervical wart-like cutaneous appendage with a contiguous stalk of limited dorsal myeloschisis treated with untethering after long-term follow-up.
Limited dorsal myeloschisis (LDM) is a condition in which the separation of the neuroectoderm from the cutaneous ectoderm during primary neural tube formation results in localized disjuncture, causing a continuous cord-like connection and spinal cord tethering. We reported a case of cervical LDM with a wart-like cutaneous appendage that was treated with excision after long-term follow-up. The patient was an 18-year-old girl. A wart-like cutaneous appendage was noted over the nape of the neck since birth. Computed tomography showed spina bifida in the cervical and thoracic spines, and spinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a cervical skin lesion and an enlarged dural sac in the dorsal thoracic spinal cord. At 18 years of age, the patient occasionally experienced numbness in her left hand and was referred to our outpatient clinic due to a new high signal intensity in the dorsal cervical spinal cord on a T2-weighted MRI. The MRI showed that a cord-like object was continuous intradural and dorsal to the spinal cord from a cutaneous lesion in the median cervical region, with a high signal in the same region. Symptomatic cervical spinal cord tethering due to a cord-like material was diagnosed, and the patient underwent resection. During surgery, the tract was removed from the cutaneous lesion into the dura mater as a single mass and untethered in the dorsal spinal cord. The histological diagnosis was a pseudo-dermal sinus tract with no luminal structures or neural tissue present, as the cord-like substance was connective tissue containing small blood vessels. Based on the neuroimaging and pathological findings, the patient was diagnosed with cervical LDM. Neurological symptoms improved postoperatively. Herein, we reported a case of cervical LDM that was treated after long-term follow-up. The patient's symptoms improved immediately after surgery. Cervical LDMs are rare, and the timing of surgery for LDM should be considered according to the patient's condition.
Saccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis with a Short Stalk at the Base of the Sac Causing Spinal Cord Deviation out of the Spinal Canal.
Saccular limited dorsal myeloschisis is a condition in which the spinal cord is tethered by a fibroneural stalk that links the cord to a saccular skin lesion, probably due to a small segmental failure of the disjunction between the neural and cutaneous ectoderm during primary neurulation. We previously reported that the dorsally bent cord deviated from the canal into the sac when the tethering effect of the limited dorsal myeloschisis stalk was strong. These cases of saccular limited dorsal myeloschisis should be prenatally differentiated from myelomeningoceles; however, this is complicated by the limited resolution of prenatal magnetic resonance imaging. Nevertheless, postnatal magnetic resonance imaging, including three-dimensional heavily T2-weighted imaging, to demonstrate the stalk linking the top of the bent cord to the sac dome is essential. We recently treated a patient who presented with a cord deviation to the sac due to a short stalk linking the rostral part of the bent cord to the base of the sac. While the sagittal and axial views of three-dimensional heavily T2-weighted imaging alone were insufficient to visualize the short stalk, the coronal view clearly demonstrated that the stalk ran almost parallel to it. During surgery, untethering the cord and completely returning it to the canal is important.
Incomplete cervical limited dorsal myeloschisis with membranous sac: a case report and literature review.
Limited dorsal myeloschisis (LDM) is caused by a primary neurulation defect resulting from incomplete disjunction of the cutaneous and neural ectoderm, and manifests as a fibroneural tethering stalk linking the skin lesion to the underlying spinal cord. We present a case of cervical LDM associated with a multi-lobular cystic lesion suspected during the prenatal ultrasonographic check-up. A diaphanous membranous cystic sac without neuronal components inside was extruded from the dorsal cervical vertebrae at the C6/7 portion. The preoperative diagnosis was confirmed by computed tomography (CT), and the lesion was successfully removed. The membranous sac with arachnoid tissue was extruded from the dural defect without direct connection with fibroneural tissue, suggesting incomplete LDM. We report the clinical characteristics of this rare entity along with a literature review.
[Limited dorsal myeloschisis: From antenatal screening to postnatal evolution. About a series of cases from the Grand Est, Bourgogne and Franche-Comté].
Limited dorsal myeloschisis (LDM) is a rare closed neural tube defect characterized by the presence of a fibroneural rod connecting the spinal cord to the skin, and a focal closed skin defect. Distinguishing between open and closed forms of dysraphism is a major challenge, given their variable prognosis. However, the diagnosis of LDM in the antenatal period is difficult and the prognosis of children is little studied, although these data are vital in order to establish suitable prenatal advice and provide couples with the best possible support. We conducted a retrospective multicenter observational study from May 2010 to March 2023 on 5 reference centers attached to a prenatal diagnosis center: the university hospital centers (CHU) of Besançon, Dijon, Nancy, Reims and Strasbourg. A total of 21 cases of LDM suspected on reference ultrasonography were included. The ultrasound criteria used were standardized and corresponded to those described in the literature. In 76% of cases, MRI was performed to complement the obstetrical ultrasound. Amniocentesis was performed in over 50% of cases, and was always normal. Of the 21 cases initially suspected prenatally, there were 17 live births: 9 confirmed cases of LDM (52.9%) and 8 invalidated cases (47.1%), corresponding to another diagnosis. Of the 9 confirmed cases of LDM, 8 were isolated forms, and 1 was associated with a polymalformative syndrome (VACTERL). On reference ultrasonography, there were no significant differences in criteria between confirmed and invalidated LDM, apart from the fibroneural stalk described sonographically in 2 cases, both confirmed postnatally. Concerning the spinal level, there was a difference in involvement, with a predominance of the lumbar level in confirmed cases of LDM, whereas a sacral level was preferred among infirm cases. MRI was carried out in 76% of cases, and confirmed the diagnosis of LDM in 71% of confirmed cases in the postnatal period. Of the 5 requests for medical termination of pregnancy (MTP), 3 were accepted, but 2 were refused by the CPDPN. These two cases corresponded to a confirmed postnatal isolated LDM and a lipomyelomeningocele, both with a favorable prognosis and evolution. Postnatal follow-up averaged 32 months. No notable neurological abnormalities were noted. In terms of bladder and bowel function, urinary tract infections and constipation were common but rare (n=3/6; 50%) and not severe. No significant psychomotor retardation was reported. The 8 cases of invalidated LDM all corresponded to closed dysraphism. No diagnosis was corrected to open dysraphism. In contrast to myelomeningocele, our study confirms that limited dorsal myeloschisis (LDM) tends to have a good prognosis. However, given the risk of postnatal symptoms, particularly sphincter symptoms, management must be early and multidisciplinary. The place of MTP seems questionable. Prenatal counseling must be adapted in the light of these results, after multidisciplinary discussion, in order to communicate clear and appropriate information to future parents.
Publicações recentes
Saccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: A New Indication for Prenatal Surgery? Case Series and Scoping Review.
Saccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis with a Short Stalk at the Base of the Sac Causing Spinal Cord Deviation out of the Spinal Canal.
🥉 Relato de casoPrenatal Diagnosis to Postnatal Outcomes of Saccular Forms of Closed Spina Dysraphism: A Single Center Retrospective Study.
Incomplete cervical limited dorsal myeloschisis with membranous sac: a case report and literature review.
[Limited dorsal myeloschisis: From antenatal screening to postnatal evolution. About a series of cases from the Grand Est, Bourgogne and Franche-Comté].
📚 EuropePMCmostrando 61
Saccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis with a Short Stalk at the Base of the Sac Causing Spinal Cord Deviation out of the Spinal Canal.
NMC case report journalPrenatal Diagnosis to Postnatal Outcomes of Saccular Forms of Closed Spina Dysraphism: A Single Center Retrospective Study.
Prenatal diagnosisIncomplete cervical limited dorsal myeloschisis with membranous sac: a case report and literature review.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric Neurosurgery[Limited dorsal myeloschisis: From antenatal screening to postnatal evolution. About a series of cases from the Grand Est, Bourgogne and Franche-Comté].
Gynecologie, obstetrique, fertilite & senologieSaccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: A Distinct Prenatal Entity.
Fetal diagnosis and therapyOutcome of Children With Prenatally Diagnosed Saccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: The Importance of Accurate Diagnosis.
Prenatal diagnosisCervical wart-like cutaneous appendage with a contiguous stalk of limited dorsal myeloschisis treated with untethering after long-term follow-up.
Surgical neurology internationalNeonatal diagnosis of cervical limited dorsal myeloschisis.
Anales de pediatriaSpinal epidermoid cyst associated with limited dorsal myeloschisis.
Surgical neurology internationalMirror movements associated with cervical limited dorsal myeloschisis: a unique case study.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryCervical saccular limited dorsal myeloschisis, so-called "cervical myelomeningocele": long-term follow-up of a single-center series and systematic review.
Journal of neurosurgery. PediatricsFocal Spinal Nondisjunctional Disorders: Including a Discussion on the Embryogenesis of Cranial Focal Nondisjunctional Lesions.
Advances and technical standards in neurosurgeryRuptured saccular limited dorsal myeloschisis: good indication for fetal repair.
Ultrasound in obstetrics & gynecology : the official journal of the International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and GynecologyLimited exposure to preserve stability and achieve complete excision of limited dorsal myeloschisis - the "Skip-Hop Laminectomy" technique: a technical note.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryLimited dorsal myeloschisis associated with intramedullary infantile hemangioma in the conus medullaris: illustrative case.
Journal of neurosurgery. Case lessonsAtlantoaxial limited dorsal myeloschisis: A report of two cases and review of literature.
Brain & spineFetal spinal cord tractography in a case of limited dorsal myeloschisis.
Ultrasound in obstetrics & gynecology : the official journal of the International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and GynecologyTeaching NeuroImage: Prenatal Diagnosis of Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis.
NeurologyDisorders of Secondary Neurulation: Suggestion of a New Classification According to Pathoembryogenesis.
Advances and technical standards in neurosurgeryLimited dorsal myeloschisis without extradural stalk continuity to coexisting congenital dermal sinus.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryLimited dorsal myeloschisis involving one hemicord of a split cord malformation - a "hemi-LDM".
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryGiant limited dorsal myeloschisis may be associated with normal functional prognosis.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgerySaccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis with Spinal Cord Deviation out of the Spinal Canal to the Sac.
NMC case report journalThe Absence of the Neuronal Component in Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: A Case Report.
Pediatric neurosurgeryThe Myelic Limited Dorsal Malformation: Prenatal Ultrasonographic Characteristics of an Intermediate Form of Dysraphism.
Fetal diagnosis and therapyCongenital Cervical Tethered Spinal Cord in Adults: Recognition, Surgical Technique, and Literature Review.
World neurosurgerySpinal cord deformity with aggravation of tethering in saccular limited dorsal myeloschisis during the first 2 months of life.
Surgical neurology internationalSurgical histopathology of a filar anomaly as an additional tethering element associated with closed spinal dysraphism of primary neurulation failure.
Surgical neurology internationalExtensive cervicothoracic posterior arch defects from C1 to T6 leading to myelopathy due to thoracic kyphosis in an adolescent boy.
Spine deformityDisorders of Secondary Neurulation : Mainly Focused on Pathoembryogenesis.
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical SocietyFocal Spinal Nondisjunction in Primary Neurulation : Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis and Congenital Spinal Dermal Sinus Tract.
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical SocietyCongenital Dermal Sinus Elements in Each Tethering Stalk of Coexisting Thoracic Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis and Retained Medullary Cord.
Pediatric neurosurgeryEarly de-tethering: analysis of urological and clinical consequences in a series of 40 children.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryLimited dorsal myeloschisis in three cats: a distinctive form of neural tube defect.
JFMS open reportsNeurosurgical Pathology and Management of Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis Associated with Congenital Dermal Sinus in Infancy.
Pediatric neurosurgeryAmniotic band syndrome associated with limited dorsal myeloschisis: a case report of an unusual case and review of the literature.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryLimited dorsal myeloschisis with a contiguous stalk to human tail-like cutaneous appendage, associated with a lipoma of conus medullaris: A case report.
International journal of surgery case reportsPerspectives on Spinal Dysraphism : Past, Present, and Future.
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical SocietyEnlargement of Extraspinal Cysts in Spinal Dysraphism : A Reason for Early Untethering.
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical SocietySpinal Dysraphism in the Last Two Decades : What I Have Seen during the Era of Dynamic Advancement.
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical SocietyTerminal syringomyelia associated with lumbar limited dorsal myeloschisis.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryRetained medullary cord with sacral subcutaneous meningocele and congenital dermal sinus.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryHuman tail-like cutaneous appendage with a contiguous stalk of limited dorsal myeloschisis.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryCommentary: Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: Reconsideration of its Embryological Origin.
NeurosurgeryLimited Dorsal Myeloschisis with and without Type I Split Cord Malformation: Report of 3 Cases and Surgical Nuances.
Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania)Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: Reconsideration of its Embryological Origin.
NeurosurgerySlender Stalk with Combined Features of Saccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis and Congenital Dermal Sinus in a Neonate.
Pediatric neurosurgeryLimited dorsal myeloschisis with no extradural stalk linking to a flat skin lesion: a case report.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgerySurgical histopathology of limited dorsal myeloschisis with flat skin lesion.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryCongenital Dermal Sinus and Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: "Spectrum Disorders" of Incomplete Dysjuction Between Cutaneous and Neural Ectoderms.
NeurosurgeryA case of junctional neural tube defect associated with a lipoma of the filum terminale: a new subtype of junctional neural tube defect?
Journal of neurosurgery. PediatricsNeurosurgical pathology of limited dorsal myeloschisis.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryA case of prenatally diagnosed limited dorsal myeloschisis with good prognosis.
Journal of clinical ultrasound : JCUModification of surgical procedure for "probable" limited dorsal myeloschisis.
Journal of neurosurgery. PediatricsMultiple neural tube defects: a rare combination of limited dorsal myeloschisis, diplomyelia with dorsal bony spur, sacral meningocoele, syringohydromyelia, and tethered cord.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryLimited Dorsal Myeloschisis and Congenital Dermal Sinus: Comparison of Clinical and MR Imaging Features.
AJNR. American journal of neuroradiologyLimited dorsal myeloschisis associated with dermoid elements.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryLimited Dorsal Myeloschisis: A Diagnostic Pitfall in the Prenatal Ultrasound of Fetal Dysraphism.
Fetal diagnosis and therapy[Preliminary results from the French study on prenatal repair for fetal myelomeningoceles (the PRIUM study)].
Journal de gynecologie, obstetrique et biologie de la reproductionA practical clinical classification of spinal neural tube defects.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryMissed limited dorsal myeloschisis: an unfortunate cause for recurrent tethered cord syndrome.
Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric NeurosurgeryAssociações
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Referências e fontes
Bases de dados externas citadas neste artigo
Publicações científicas
Artigos indexados no PubMed ligados a esta doença no grafo RarasNet — título, periódico e PMID direto da fonte, sem intermediação de IA.
- Prenatal Diagnosis to Postnatal Outcomes of Saccular Forms of Closed Spina Dysraphism: A Single Center Retrospective Study.
- Cervical wart-like cutaneous appendage with a contiguous stalk of limited dorsal myeloschisis treated with untethering after long-term follow-up.
- Saccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis with a Short Stalk at the Base of the Sac Causing Spinal Cord Deviation out of the Spinal Canal.
- Incomplete cervical limited dorsal myeloschisis with membranous sac: a case report and literature review.Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric Neurosurgery· 2025· PMID 41109880mais citado
- [Limited dorsal myeloschisis: From antenatal screening to postnatal evolution. About a series of cases from the Grand Est, Bourgogne and Franche-Comté].
- Saccular Limited Dorsal Myeloschisis: A New Indication for Prenatal Surgery? Case Series and Scoping Review.
Bases de dados e fontes oficiais
Identificadores e referências canônicas usadas para montar este verbete.
- ORPHA:645196(Orphanet)
- MONDO:0958345(MONDO)
- Busca completa no PubMed(PubMed)
Dados compilados pelo RarasNet a partir de fontes abertas (Orphanet, OMIM, MONDO, PubMed/EuropePMC, ClinicalTrials.gov, DATASUS, PCDT/MS). Este conteúdo é informativo e não substitui avaliação médica.
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