Protecting Your Spine, Preserving Your Strength
Have you been diagnosed with a spinal cord tumor causing back pain, numbness, or weakness? Whether benign or malignant, tumors in or around the spinal cord can compress vital nerves and threaten mobility, sensation, and overall neurological health.
Spinal cord tumor surgeries are performed to remove or reduce these growths, relieve pressure on the spinal cord and nerves, and restore your ability to live a pain-free, active life.
Spinal cord tumors are abnormal growths that can develop within the spinal cord (intramedullary), in the surrounding membranes (intradural-extramedullary), or outside the dura (extradural). These tumors may be:
Benign (e.g., meningiomas, schwannomas, ependymomas)
Malignant (e.g., metastatic tumors, gliomas)
Primary or secondary (spreading from another part of the body)
Surgical removal is often recommended when the tumor:
Causes significant pain, weakness, or numbness
Compresses the spinal cord or nerve roots
Shows signs of growth or malignancy
Interferes with walking, balance, or bladder control
Does not respond to radiation or other treatments
Decompress the spinal cord and nerves
Remove or debulk the tumor as safely and completely as possible
Preserve neurological function
Relieve pain and restore mobility
Obtain tissue for accurate diagnosis and further treatment planning
Unexplained back or neck pain
Radiating pain to arms or legs
Tingling, numbness, or weakness
Loss of coordination or balance
Difficulty walking or using hands
Bowel or bladder dysfunction