Cases reported "Cerebellar Neoplasms"

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1/500. Disorders in cerebellar ocular motor control. II. Macrosaccadic oscillation. An oculographic, control system and clinico-anatomical analysis.

    A distinctive cerebellar ocular motor disorder, macrosaccadic oscillation, evolved simultaneously with an acute cerebellar syndrome in 4 patients, 2 with haemorrhagic metastatic melanoma deep in the vermis, a third with a presumed cerebellar haematoma and a fourth with focal demyelinating disease. Ocular oscillations were conjugate, horizontal, symmetrical, occurred in bursts of several seconds duration, had amplitudes of 30 degrees to 50 degrees, and were evoked whenever the patient attempted to shift visual fixation or pursue a moving target. Photo-electric recordings in one patient with tumour defined features of this disorder of saccadic eye movement: (i) oscillation was composed of saccades, (ii) frequency was 2 Hz, (iii) bursts occurred with amplitude first increasing and then decreasing, (iv) intervals between beginnings of saccades averaged 260 ms and (v) eye position did not exhibit systematic drift during the intersaccadic period. These features documented the inreased gain and instability of the visually guided saccadic system. By using increased feed-forward gain in a sampled-data control model we simulated the pattern of macrosaccadic oscillation. We belive that the acute loss of the calibrator function of the cerebellum accounts for the gain abnormality underlying macrosaccadic oscillation.
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keywords = stem
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2/500. Transient peduncular hallucinations secondary to brain stem compression by a cerebellar pilocytic astrocytoma.

    Almost all peduncular hallucinations have been described in patients with intrinsic lesions of the midbrain. An, as yet, unreported case of peduncular hallucinosis caused by posterior compression of the midbrain by a cerebellar pilocytic astrocytoma is described. The hallucinations and associated symptoms only ceased after removal of the tumour.
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ranking = 38.018949183618
keywords = brain stem, brain, stem, midbrain
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3/500. Intracranial germ cell tumors in children with and without down syndrome.

    PURPOSE: Two Chinese children with down syndrome affected by intracranial germ cell tumors are described. Because they represent two of eight affected patients in the current series from 1990 to 1996, it is postulated that such occurrence may be more than a coincidental event. patients AND methods: Two children with down syndrome developed germ cell tumors in atypical intracranial sites that affected basal ganglion and cerebellum. The pathology showed germinoma and yolk sac tumor, respectively. These were treated by radical surgical resection and chemotherapy with cisplatin, etoposide, and bleomycin, but without radiotherapy. RESULTS: One patient survived 3 years without radiologic evidence of tumor. The other died from infective complications caused by severe myelosuppression after chemotherapy. CONCLUSIONS: Subtle neurologic manifestations in developmentally handicapped patients with intracranial space-occupying lesions could result in delayed diagnosis. Children with down syndrome suffering from brain tumors may have a higher chance for germ cell tumors. Assay for alpha-fetoprotein and beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin could hasten diagnosis in some cases. This observation and review of literature suggest an increased risk of developing intracranial germ cell tumors in subjects with down syndrome.
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ranking = 0.9679054154857
keywords = brain
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4/500. Effects of puberty on bone age maturation in a girl after medulloblastoma therapy.

    BACKGROUND: Craniospinal radiotherapy for malignant brain tumors can result in a variety of neuroendocrine disturbances, among which are the development of growth hormone deficiency and early puberty, which can markedly reduce adult height. methods: The authors report the case of a girl who received craniospinal radiotherapy for a medulloblastoma at the age of 3.4 years. At 9.1 years, growth hormone therapy was started, and spontaneous onset of puberty (Tanner stage B2) occurred at age 10.3 years. Interval until menarche was short, at only 0.9 years. RESULTS: Although chronologic age at appearance of Tanner stages was within the normal range, the patient showed a rapid acceleration in skeletal maturation, resulting in adult short stature. CONCLUSION: Bone age seems to be a more precise parameter for biologic maturation in some patients after craniospinal irradiation than is clinical assessment of pubertal stages. Thus, if progression of bone age and decreasing final height predictions are noted, puberty should be stopped with gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogs, even if pubertal development seems to be adequate for chronologic age, because this increases the remaining time for growth hormone treatment.
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ranking = 0.9679054154857
keywords = brain
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5/500. HPV in situ hybridization with catalyzed signal amplification and polymerase chain reaction in establishing cerebellar metastasis of a cervical carcinoma.

    We report an unusual case of cerebellar metastasis from a cervical adenosquamous carcinoma in which molecular techniques assisted in establishing the correct diagnosis. The patient was a 43-year-old woman with surgically unresectable cervical carcinoma diagnosed 2 years before presenting with neurological symptoms. A magnetic resonance imaging scan showed a large, enhancing cerebellar lesion with significant brain stem compression. The excised cerebellar tumor resembled a small cell carcinoma and was initially not thought to be a metastasis from the cervical adenosquamous carcinoma. in situ hybridization with catalyzed signal amplification and polymerase chain reactions with primers specific for human papilloma virus (HPV) types 16 and 18 were used to determine the relationship between the cervical and the cerebellar neoplasms. A positive signal was present in the nuclei of both neoplasms by in situ hybridization using HPV16/18 dna probes. polymerase chain reaction revealed the presence of HPV-18 DNA sequences in the cervical and cerebellar neoplasms confirming that the cerebellar neoplasm was a metastasis from the cervical primary.
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ranking = 8.9758295811025
keywords = brain stem, brain, stem
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6/500. Brain metastasis of Merkel cell carcinoma. Case report and review of the literature.

    Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare primary cutaneous neuroendocrine tumor that is locally aggressive and has potential for metastatic spread. However, brain metastases are rare, and therapy for such tumors has never reported. The authors present a 48-year-old woman with MCC of the left elbow and a right cerebellar metastasis. After the right cerebellar mass was totally resected, radiation treatment and chemotherapy were performed. Eight cases of brain metastasis have been reported in the literature, but only 5 have been presented in sufficient detail for analysis. Therapy for brain metastases has always been palliative whole-brain irradiation and chemotherapy except for our patient, who underwent total removal of the tumor and survived for 11 months without neurological deficit. Except in the case of 1 with a particularly radiosensitive MCC, the patients with brain metastases died within 9 months after detection of the brain lesions. If possible, aggressive excision of brain metastases as well as of the primary lesion should be done.
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ranking = 6.7753379083999
keywords = brain
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7/500. Midline cerebellar cystic schwannoma : a case report.

    An extremely unusual case of a cystic schwannoma in the region of the inferior vermis and posterior to the fourth ventricle in a fifteen year old boy is reported. The cystic tumour caused partial obstruction to the outflow of cerebrospinal fluid from fourth ventricle and resulted in development of supratentorial hydrocephalus. On investigations, the schwannoma simulated a Dandy-Walker cyst. The boy presented with symptoms of increased intracranial pressure. On surgery, the lesion was not arising from any cranial nerve, nor was it attached to brain parenchyma, blood vessel or to the dura. The possible histogenesis of the cystic schwannoma in a rare location is discussed.
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ranking = 0.9679054154857
keywords = brain
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8/500. Recurrent intracranial Masson's vegetant intravascular hemangioendothelioma. Case report and review of the literature.

    In the central nervous system, recurrence of intracranial Masson's vegetant intravascular hemangioendothelioma (MVIH) is rare. To the authors' knowledge, only three recurrent intracranial cases have been reported. The authors report the case of a 75-year-old woman with a recurrent left-sided cerebellopontine angle and middle cranial fossa MVIH. When the patient was 62 years of age, she underwent preoperative embolization and subtotal resection of the intracranial lesion followed by postoperative radiotherapy. She was well and free from disease until 9 years postoperatively when she became symptomatic. At 71 years of age, the patient again underwent preoperative embolization and near-gross-total resection of the lesion. Follow-up imaging performed 15 months later revealed tumor recurrence, and she underwent stereotactic gamma knife radiosurgery. At a 2.75-year follow-up review, the patient's imaging studies revealed stable residual tumor. This case report is unique in that it documents the clinical and pathological features, surgical and postoperative treatment, and long-term follow-up review of a patient with recurrent intracranial MVIH and suggests that this unusual vascular lesion is a slow-growing benign tumor rather than a reactive process. Because the pathological composition of the lesion may resemble an angiosarcoma, understanding this benign vascular neoplasm is crucial so that an erroneous diagnosis of malignancy is not made and unnecessary adjuvant therapy is not given.
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ranking = 0.16666666666667
keywords = stem
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9/500. Infectious meningitis mimicking recurrent medulloblastoma on magnetic resonance imaging. Case report.

    This report and the accompanying review of the literature address the challenges, when using surveillance magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, of establishing the origin of newly detected central nervous system lesions. Routine surveillance MR imaging in a 16-year-old boy, whose medulloblastoma had been successfully treated, demonstrated asymptomatic nodular leptomeningeal enhancement of the brain and spinal cord, which was consistent with recurrent disease. Examination of the cerebrospinal fluid, however, led to the diagnosis of bacterial meningitis. Two weeks after completion of antibiotic therapy, the original MR imaging findings were seen to have resolved. This case illustrates the importance of considering clinical and laboratory data, including results from a complete examination of the cerebrospinal fluid, when interpreting the origin of new lesions revealed by MR imaging.
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ranking = 1.1345720821524
keywords = brain, stem
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10/500. Secondary supratentorial anaplastic astrocytoma following treatment of medulloblastoma.

    The development of secondary tumours is a rare but well known late effect of radiation therapy of lesions in the central nervous system. Most radiation-induced tumours are of mesenchymal origin, but on rare occasions gliomas can occur. We describe a patient in whom a supratentorial anaplastic astrocytoma developed 15 years after surgery and radiotherapy for a childhood posterior fossa medulloblastoma. A concise review of the pertinent literature is given.
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ranking = 0.16666666666667
keywords = stem
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