Abstract
Spinal lipomatosis is seldom reported in spinal literature and although the condition occurs commonly, we seldom recognise it in reviewing spinal MRI scans. We aim to highlight the condition and show MRI signs to allow easier recognition. We also introduce a new method of evaluation of the severity of the condition using T1 MRI axial views to evaluate the area of the spinal canal involved in the pathological process.
We have evaluated 30 patients with a diagnosis of spinal lipomatosis made on sagittal MRI scanning of the spine. The T1 and T2 axial images have been evaluated using standard digital software which allows calculation of the surface area occupied by fat and allows representation of this as a ratio to total canal diameter. This has then been correlated to the traditional method of classifying lipomatosis on sagittal MRI sequences.
We have found this method useful and believe it provides a more accurate representation of how fat in the canal may produce symptoms of nerve compression. This shows that the condition behaves more like our traditional understanding of spinal stenosis with symptoms more likely when the relationship of fat to canal reaches greater than 50%. This approach to spinal lipomatosis has not been described before but we feel produces a better understanding of the condition than we have had before by using a classification based on purely on sagittal MRI sequences.
Ethics approval: None Audit
Interest Statement: No conflict of interest
Correspondence should be addressed to BASS/BCSS c/o BOA, at the Royal College of Surgeons, 35–43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London, WC2A 3PE, England.