• ABSTRACT
    • Intraneural ganglion cysts are a rare occurrence. They are most commonly found originating from the common peroneal nerve but are also frequently reported on the radial, ulnar, median, sciatic, tibial, and posterior interosseous nerves. A typical clinical presentation is posterior knee and calf pain resulting from tibial neuropathy with preferential degeneration of the popliteus muscle. Symptoms include pain, paresthesias, and decreased strength that originates in the knee and commonly extends to the plantar surface of the foot. These findings can be mistaken for lumbar neuropathies and compression of the sacral nerve roots. Differential diagnosis includes peripheral nerve sheath tumors, Baker's cysts, extraneural ganglion cysts, and atypical vascular or lymphatic malformations. In this case report, the patient was a 61-year-old male, previously in good health, who presented with progressive pain in his medial left hamstring as well as weakness in left foot plantar flexion and paresthesias in the plantar aspect of his left foot. He first noticed impairments with his ability to push off with his left foot when running. His electromyogram (EMG) was abnormal and subsequent MRI of the left leg showed a complex intraneural ganglion cyst arising from the tibiofibular joint and ascending into the tibial nerve. He underwent indirect decompression through joint resection. Unfortunately, he did not have clinical improvement on one-year follow-up. Overall, symptomatic treatment of intraneural ganglion cyst includes decompression, surgical excision, or minimally invasive decompression by percutaneous aspiration of the ganglion under ultrasound guidance.