Experimental Analysis of the Spinal Cord Compressed by Spinal Metastasis

Abstract
The purpose of the present study of experimental spinal metastasis, developed in rats by inoculation of tumor cells through the spinous process, was to find the factor that causes the initial damage to the cord in this disorder. In the early stage of paralysis, the degenerated posterior funiculus originated from a small hemorrhagic area in the posterior column of the involved cord. Using the scaning electron microscope, the hemorrhage was found to be from the intrinsic vein, resulting from the disturbance of venous drainage in the compressed portion. In the early stage of compression, extravasation of horseradish peroxidase was observed in the white matter, but histologic degeneration was not. A hemorrhage existed wherever degeneration of the funiculus was observed. Therefore, the trigger to induce the initial damage on the cord in spinal metastasis was not likely to be vasogenic edema, but instead the intrinsic venous hemorrhage.