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Case Reports
. 2017 Jan 25;2(1):46-49.
doi: 10.1080/20961790.2016.1265236. eCollection 2017.

Intramedullary schwannoma of the upper cervical spinal cord: a case study of identification in pathologic autopsy

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Case Reports

Intramedullary schwannoma of the upper cervical spinal cord: a case study of identification in pathologic autopsy

Xianxian Li et al. Forensic Sci Res. .

Abstract

Intramedullary schwannoma of the upper cervical spinal cord is rarely reported in forensic medicine. We herein report a case involving a patient who died of compression from an intramedullary schwannoma in the upper cervical spinal cord. A 30-year-old man initially presented with a five-day history of pain in the left chest that progressed to weakening in the left arm. Although the patient was treated with analgesic poultices, he developed inspiratory dyspnoea and died while working the next day without having undergone any medical imaging examination or surgical treatment. Anatomical and histopathological examinations revealed an intramedullary schwannoma in the left cervical spinal cord (C3-C5) underneath the spinal nerve root. The cause of death might have been asphyxia secondary to the tumour, which interfered with the nerve function in the respiratory muscles. This finding suggests that an autopsy is essential for pathologists and medicolegists to comprehensively undertake their due obligation to obtain "the first evidence", especially when there is a lack of directly related evidence. As part of the central nervous system, the spinal cord could be systematically included in a routine pathological autopsy in some cases.

Keywords: Forensic science; asphyxia; forensic pathology; intramedullary schwannoma; spinal cord.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Macroscopic view of the intramedullary schwannoma. (A) The neoplasm in the cervical spinal cord (C3–C5). (B) The long, oval neoplasm (2.5 cm × 1.0 cm × 1.0 cm). (C) Local concave compression of C3–C5.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Microscopic examination of the intramedullary schwannoma. (A) Verocay body (HE ×400). (B) Hollow-like degeneration of the spinal nerve tracts (HE ×200). (C) Hydropic degeneration of anterior spinal cord motor neurons (HE ×400).

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