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Description
A 62-year-old woman was referred to the orthopaedic oncology service for evaluation of a bleeding and enlarging soft tissue mass along the right anterior abdominal wall. She had a lifelong history of a cutaneous and subcutaneous vascular malformation, affecting the right lateral chest and right abdomen and extending proximally to involve the mid-thoracic spine. Her medical history was significant for a prior aborted attempted surgical resection of the vascular malformation in 1980 due to intraoperative bleeding. Her history also included L4–L5 laminectomy without fusion for lower extremity weakness without radicular symptoms in 1989 and coil embolisation of a T9 epidural fistula in 2011 to prevent any abnormal vascular flow. Examination of the bilateral lower extremity showed marked steppage gait with bilateral external rotation deformities and bilateral foot drop. Motor examination of the lower extremities revealed muscle power grading of 1/5 extensor hallucis longus bilaterally, 2/5 tibialis anterior bilaterally, 4/5 flexor hallucis longus, 4/5 knee extension bilaterally and knee flexion 4/5 left, 5/5 right. Physical examination also revealed hyperpigmented, raised vascular changes with ‘port wine stains’ consistent with cutaneous involvement of two haemangiomas; one along the right chest wall (9×6 cm) and another on the right abdominal wall (18×12 cm) (figure 1). Both pigmented areas were surrounded by large subcutaneous distended veins. Despite distal neuropathy and myelopathy and prior medical attention, the patient denied being given a diagnosis of Cobb syndrome.
MRI revealed a large vascular malformation involving the right lateral chest, abdominal wall musculature and right posterior paraspinous musculature that extended into the spinal canal at T8 level with associated vertebral body destruction (figures 2 and 3). The patient was diagnosed with Cobb syndrome, a rare congenital condition characterised with arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) and vascular lesions in the same dermatome with associated spinal angiomas or AVMs.1 Treatment considerations centre on preventing or treating neurological symptoms. Treatment options remain ambiguous and have included use of steroids, surgery and endovascular embolisation. Recognition of the associated cutaneous lesions with spinal lesions will allow for prevention and treatment of neurological symptoms.
Learning points
If a cutaneous vascular malformation is found to have a metameric distribution on the trunk, a diagnosis of Cobb syndrome should be considered.
Early diagnosis of Cobb syndrome and assessment of the appropriate treatment reduce permanent consequences such as paraplegia or sensory and motor deficits.
Footnotes
Contributors All authors have substantial contributions towards the conception and design of the work. MI and AJA wrote the manuscript and revised it critically for important intellectual content. All authors approved the final manuscript and agreed to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.