RSS-Feed abonnieren

DOI: 10.4103/ajns.AJNS_209_17
Human tail: A benign condition hidden out of social stigma and shame in young adult – A case report and review
Authors

A human tail is a rare congenital anomaly which mostly presents immediately after birth or in early childhood. Here, we are presenting a case of 17-year-old male who presented with 18-cm long tail, which was hidden till this age because of social stigma and shame. This is longest human tail reported of our knowledge. This patient presented to us because he started having difficulty, pain while sitting, and discomfort in daily activities because of long tail. We suspect there are far more cases of human tails in developing world which are hidden because of lack of knowledge, illiteracy, social stigma, and shame. This patient had no neurological deficit and had no bowel/bladder involvement. The radiological investigation was suggestive of spina bifida at L5and S3–S4 levels (site of attachment of the tail), and tip of the coccyx had bony spur directed posteriorly. Intraoperatively, no connection was found between tail and neural tissue. Human tail is associated with occult spinal lesions in 50% of cases, hence careful neurological and radiological investigations are warranted before surgical exploration.
Financial support and sponsorship
Nil.
Publikationsverlauf
Artikel online veröffentlicht:
09. September 2022
© 2019. Asian Congress of Neurological Surgeons. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
A-12, 2nd Floor, Sector 2, Noida-201301 UP, India
-
References
- 1 Kansal R, Agrawal N, Khare S, Khare A, Jain S, Singhal BM. Newborn with a tail –
A genetic throwback. Peoples J Sci Res 2010;3:15-7.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 2 Lu FL, Wang PJ, Teng RJ, Yau KI. The human tail. Pediatr Neurol 1998;19:230-3.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 3 Dao AH, Netsky MG. Human tails and pseudotails. Hum Pathol 1984;15:449-53.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 4 Harrison RG. On the occurrence of tails in man, with a description of the case reported
by Dr. Watson. Johns Hopkins Hosp Bull 1901;12:96-101.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 5 Parsons RW. Human tails. Plast Reconstr Surg Transplant Bull 1960;25:618-21.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 6 Ledley FD. Evolution and the human tail: A case report. N Engl J Med 1982;306:1212-5.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 7 Arey LB. Developmental Anatomy. Revised 7th ed. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Company;
1974.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 8 Williams PL, Wendell-Smith CP, Treadgold S. Basic Human Embryology. London: Pitman
Medical Publishing Company; 1966.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 9 Bar-Maor JA, Kesner KM, Kaftori JK. Human tails. J Bone Joint Surg Br 1980;62-B:508-10.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 10 Fallon JF, Simandl BK. Evidence of a role for cell death in the disappearance of
the embryonic human tail. Am J Anat 1978;152:111-29.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 11 Belzberg AJ, Myles ST, Trevenen CL. The human tail and spinal dysraphism. J Pediatr
Surg 1991;26:1243-5.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 12 Virchow R. Über schwanzbildung beim menschen. Virchows Arch Pathol Anat Physiol 1880;79:176-82.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 13 Bartels M. Die geschwanzten menschen. Arch Anthropol 1884;15:45-132.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 14 Lin PJ, Chang YT, Tseng HI, Lin JY, Huang YS. Human tail and myelomeningocele. Pediatr
Neurosurg 2007;43:334-7.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 15 Cai C, Shi O, Shen C. Surgical treatment of a patient with human tail and multiple
abnormalities of the spinal cord and column. Adv Orthop 2011;2011:153797.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 16 Wilkinson CC, Boylan AJ. Proposed caudal appendage classification system; spinal
cord tethering associated with sacrococcygeal eversion. Childs Nerv Syst 2017;33:69-89.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 17 McLone DG, Naidich TP. Terminal myelocystocele. Neurosurgery 1985;16:36-43.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
- 18 Samura K, Morioka T, Hashiguchi K, Yoshida F, Miyagi Y, Yoshiura T, et al. Coexistence
of a human tail and congenital dermal sinus associated with lumbosacral lipoma. Childs
Nerv Syst 2009;25:137-41.
Reference Ris Wihthout Link
