Let’s break down both conditions — cystic lesions and myelomalacia — as they relate to the spinal cord, including:
DefinitionsCauses (how they form)
Locations in the spinal cord
Associated conditions


A fluid-filled cavity or sac in or around the spinal cord. Often referred to as:
Syrinx or Syringomyelia (within spinal cord)
Arachnoid cyst (outside spinal cord)
Cystic neoplasm (tumors with cystic components)
Post-traumatic pseudocyst (after injury)

A softening and necrosis of spinal cord tissue, often due to:
Ischemia (lack of blood supply)
Trauma
Severe compression
It’s usually irreversible and degenerative.


Cause Type Examples
Congenital Syringomyelia (Chiari malformation), Tethered cord
Post-Traumatic Spinal cord injury → fluid-filled cavity (post-traumatic syrinx)
Neoplastic Tumors like ependymomas, astrocytomas can have cystic components
Infectious Tuberculosis (TB cysts), parasitic cysts (echinococcus)
Degenerative Disc herniation compressing cord → syrinx
Iatrogenic Following spinal surgery or shunt failure (syrinx formation)

Cause Type Examples
Traumatic Severe spinal cord injury (fracture/dislocation)
Ischemic Spinal cord infarction (stroke of the cord), hypoxia
Compressive Disc herniation, spinal stenosis, tumors causing chronic pressure
Post-Surgical After failed decompression or delayed surgery
Radiation-Induced Radiotherapy damage to cord tissue
Inflammatory/Autoimmune Multiple sclerosis, transverse myelitis
Vascular Malformations AVMs (arteriovenous malformations), dural AV fistula


Spinal Region Common Lesions
Cervical Syringomyelia, ependymoma (most common site for syrinx)
Thoracic Arachnoid cysts, TB cysts
Lumbar Tethered cord cysts, arachnoid cysts
Entire Cord (Holocord) In aggressive tumors like astrocytoma with cystic degeneration

Spinal Region Typical Causes
Cervical Compression from spondylosis, trauma; most commonly observed site
Thoracic Less common; can occur in severe kyphosis or tumor cases
Lumbar Rare; often misinterpreted due to conus medullaris ending
Focal vs Diffuse Myelomalacia can be segmental (1–2 levels) or multilevel in chronic compression


Condition MRI Appearance
Cystic lesion T2 hyperintense cavity (fluid-like), may expand cord
Myelomalacia T2 hyperintensity + spinal cord thinning or softening, T1 hypointense core

Condition Formation Causes Spinal Location Reversibility
Cystic lesion (syrinx, etc.) Trauma, tumor, congenital, infection Mostly cervical and thoracic Sometimes reversible (with shunt/surgery)
Myelomalacia Ischemia, trauma, compression, inflammation Mostly cervical > thoracic Usually irreversible

I can design a pseudocode or ML model prototype to analyze spinal MRIs and suggest whether a lesion is likely:
Cystic
Myelomalacic
Tumor-based
Reversible/irreversible
Would you like to explore that?
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