TY - JOUR T1 - Aggressive Thoracic Hemangioma Leading to Secondary Kyphosis with Paraparesis in the Postpartum Period. A Case Report JF - International Journal of Spine Surgery JO - Int J Spine Surg SP - 418 LP - 425 DO - 10.14444/7055 VL - 14 IS - 3 AU - ANOUAR BOURGHLI AU - SALIM M ABDULJAWAD AU - LOUIS BOISSIÈRE AU - HANI KHALIFA AU - IBRAHIM OBEID Y1 - 2020/06/01 UR - http://ijssurgery.com//content/14/3/418.abstract N2 - Background: Aggressive vertebral hemangioma is rare, and its management can be very challenging.Methods: In this report, we present the case of a 30-year-old female with a normal twin pregnancy. She had been complaining of midthoracic pain after the seventh month of pregnancy with no other symptoms. Normal delivery was done under spinal anesthesia, but the patient's back pain worsened after the delivery, and she left the hospital on Day 4 with the onset of an unsteady gait. She was seen in the spinal clinic on Day 14, referred by her gynecologist, with a paraparetic presentation that was rapidly worsening. Urgent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was done and revealed aggressive hemangioma of T6 with kyphosis and significant cord compression.Results: The patient was admitted and was operated the following morning. Posterior decompression with fixation from T4 to T8 and kyphosis correction was done. Samples from the vertebrae were sent to the lab for pathology analysis, and the results confirmed the diagnosis of vertebral hemangioma. She could walk on Day 1 with progressive neurological recovery, but distal junctional kyphosis in the form of a “chance fracture” of T8 occurred at 2 months and was treated conservatively. She showed a satisfactory clinical and radiological result at 2 years with no recurrence.Conclusions: Literature is sparse on the management of vertebral hemangioma in the context of pregnancy and postpartum, with only case reports, and its presentation as a kyphotic fracture is extremely rare. The current case shows how, in the context of delivery, a benign procedure such as spinal anesthesia should be done with extreme caution, as it may play a role in aggravating an undiagnosed aggressive hemangioma; rapid management after the onset of paraparetic symptoms enables a full neurological recovery, but close monitoring later on with regular MRI is mandatory for detection of any recurrence. ER -