Juan Patino edited case report 2.md  about 9 years ago

Commit id: 8c15bec74bc25a9c040a3087a992638ee235188a

deletions | additions      

       

The patient was then referred to our practice, a complete physical examination was made, she mainly complain of lower abdominal pain with overflow incontinence, sciatic pain in both legs with a predominance on the left side, and mechanical lower lumbar pain. The neurological examination showed no motor deficits in the lower extremities with preservation of tone and reflexes, sensitivity was patchy in both legs around L5 and S1 dermatomes, but resulted quite inconsistent. An MRI (Figure \ref{fig:FIGURE_1}) showed an anterior pre-sacral cyst eroding the anterior wall of S2 and S3, herniating through an sacral defect. The collection measured around 10x9cm, exerting compression on pelvic structures such as the rectum and the bladder in a significant way.  Due to these symptoms pelvic  and the presence of a growing mass a new surgical procedure consisting in a posterior sacral laminectomy and ligation of the meningocele cyst was proposed. We believe that this approach was appropriate in order to get a correct exposure of the cyst neck. Initially, the patient was very unkeen in further surgery, particularly after the results of the previous ones, however, she was so ill that she accepted surgery.