Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Spinal Cord in Spinal Dysraphisms

Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed 49 times in 42 patients with spinal dysraphism. Scoliosis and a changing neurological picture were the primary indications. Spinal cord anomalies included hydromyelia, diastematomyelia, lipoma, thickened filum terminali, and spinal cord atrophy. All but one patient exhibited Arnold-Chiari malformation. Twenty-two of the 42 patients had computed tomography (CT) scans, myelograms, or operations that corroborated the 41 MRI findings. Three false-positive MRI findings of hydromyelia and no false-negative studies were observed. MRI is a noninvasive investigative technique that provides more information than myelography or CT in defining spinal cord anatomy in spinal dysraphism.