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Spinal and Spinal Cord Tumor Surgery in Turkey (for International Patients)

Spinal and spinal cord tumors are a group of rare conditions that produce very different pictures depending on their location and type, and in which early diagnosis markedly improves outcomes. Tumors within the spinal cord tissue itself (intramedullary) are the least common but the most technically demanding group. Symptoms usually begin slowly and insidiously. This page is especially valuable for patients reaching us from abroad: by sharing your contrast MRI and reports you can receive a remote pre-assessment or an independent second opinion, because in these tumors distinguishing the type and clarifying which require observation versus surgery is largely possible before you travel. Not every tumor requires the same approach: some are removed microsurgically, some are observed, and some need additional treatment. Below we explain spinal and spinal cord tumors in plain terms: what is done in which situation and what to realistically expect.

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Spinal and Spinal Cord Tumors Are Not a Single Disease

Spinal tumors are divided by location into three: extradural (outside the dura — mostly metastases and bone tumors), intradural-extramedullary (within the dura but outside the cord — often meningioma and nerve-sheath tumors), and intramedullary (within the cord). The intramedullary group is the least common (about 4-10% of all spinal tumors) and, because it involves the cord's own tissue intertwined with critical neural structures, is among the most demanding spinal operations. They are more common in children than adults. The location of the tumor, its type and the patient's neurological status are weighed together to determine the approach.

Which Tumor Types Are Seen?

Among intramedullary tumors the most common type in adults is ependymoma; it usually sits in the midline, is well demarcated and often contains a cystic component, making it more amenable to en bloc (total) resection. The second most common, astrocytoma, grows infiltratively, has indistinct borders and often cannot be totally resected (more common in children). Hemangioblastoma is a benign vascular tumor, a proportion of which is associated with von Hippel-Lindau disease. More rarely, ganglioglioma, lipoma, epidermoid/dermoid cysts, lymphoma and intramedullary metastases occur. Most tumors within the dura but outside the cord (meningioma, schwannoma) are benign and generally do well with surgery.

Symptoms and Diagnosis

In intramedullary tumors symptoms usually begin slowly and insidiously; the time to diagnosis may be months to years. The most frequent first complaint is pain; pain at the tumor level, worse at night and of a dural-stretch type is typical, and central (neuropathic) pain may also occur. As it progresses, weakness, loss of fine motor skill, difficulty walking, selective sensory loss and balance problems are added; advanced cases show bladder-bowel problems. The gold standard for diagnosis is contrast MRI; it shows the tumor level, extent, cystic component, accompanying syringomyelia and the contrast-enhancement pattern, and helps distinguish ependymoma from astrocytoma. Definitive diagnosis, however, is by histopathology; angiography may help in vascular tumors.

Treatment: Microsurgery and Monitoring

The basis of treatment is microsurgery that achieves the widest possible safe resection while protecting neurological function. Surgery is performed with an operating microscope, an ultrasonic aspirator and intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (motor and sensory evoked potentials); this monitoring follows cord function in real time during surgery and reduces risk. In well-demarcated ependymoma and hemangioblastoma total resection is often possible; in infiltrative astrocytoma the aim is safe debulking and tissue diagnosis. For high-grade, partially removed or recurrent tumors, radiotherapy and, in selected cases, chemotherapy are considered. Some small, asymptomatic lesions (especially the multiple hemangioblastomas in von Hippel-Lindau) can be observed; that is, not every tumor means immediate surgery.

Postoperative Course, Prognosis and Realistic Expectations

In the early postoperative period the neurological status is monitored closely; because temporary sensory disturbance and weakness can occur, early rehabilitation is important. Physiotherapy and, when needed, bladder management support recovery; additional treatment is planned according to the histopathology result, and regular MRI follow-up is done for recurrence. Prognosis depends on the tumor type, its grade and, most importantly, the preoperative neurological status: outcomes are good in totally resected benign ependymoma and hemangioblastoma, and more limited in infiltrative and high-grade tumors. A good preoperative neurological status is among the strongest determinants of functional outcome — which is why early diagnosis is critical. We do not promise a guaranteed outcome; expectations are shared openly before surgery.

Sources

1Greenberg MS. Greenberg's Handbook of Neurosurgery. 10th ed. Thieme; 2023:921-928.
2Winn HR, ed. Youmans Neurological Surgery. 6th ed. Saunders; 2011.
3Patchell RA, et al. Direct decompressive surgical resection in metastatic spinal cord compression. Lancet. 2005.
📚 Read our encyclopedia article for a detailed, fully-referenced medical explanation

자주 묻는 질문

Does spinal cord tumor surgery carry a risk of paralysis?

Spinal cord tumor surgery is a serious procedure with a risk of temporary or, rarely, permanent neurological deficit. To reduce this risk, intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring is used; cord function is followed in real time during surgery. The risk varies with the tumor type, location and preoperative neurological status and is discussed openly.

Does every spinal/spinal cord tumor require surgery?

No. Surgery comes to the fore in well-demarcated, symptomatic tumors, while some small, asymptomatic lesions (for example the multiple hemangioblastomas in von Hippel-Lindau) can be observed. Some tumors need additional treatment (radiotherapy) after diagnosis. The correct approach is determined by MRI, tumor type and neurological status.

Can the tumor be removed completely?

This depends on the tumor type. In well-demarcated ependymoma and hemangioblastoma total resection is often possible; in infiltrative astrocytoma, because the borders are indistinct, the aim is safe debulking and tissue diagnosis and total removal is not always possible. The goal is always to preserve neurological function.

I'm in another country — how do I apply for assessment or a second opinion?

You can share your current contrast MRI images and any previous reports via our multilingual WhatsApp line, receive a remote pre-assessment or an independent second opinion, and then arrange a video consultation. Because early assessment matters in these tumors, sharing your imaging without delay is advised. Travel to Turkey is coordinated once the surgical plan is clear and after you have agreed.

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