Abstract
Background
Chest pain due to thoracic spinal cord tumors is rarely reported; however, we did not find any report of chest pain as presentation of spinal cord tumors.
Findings
A patient with right-sided acute onset chest pain without marked neurologic findings is presented. Six months after presentation, an intradural extramedullary schwannoma at the level of T1-T2 was detected by magnetic resonance imaging. After removing the tumor, chest pain completely disappeared and the pain did not return after a one-year follow-up.
Conclusions
Spinal cord tumors must be considered as the source of chest pain after exclusion of other causes of chest pain.
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