Cases reported "Cerebellar Neoplasms"

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1/131. 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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2/131. 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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3/131. 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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4/131. The occurrence of cerebellar hemangioblastoma in numerous first degree relatives with von hippel-lindau disease.

    von hippel-lindau disease is an autosomal dominant disorder caused by a mutation of VHL gene. The incidence of the disease is one in 36,000 and its clinical manifestation is a familial occurrence of hemangioblastoma of the central nervous system and retina, renal cell cancer and pheochromocytoma. Cerebellar hemangioblastoma is the most frequent or sometimes the only abnormality observed in this syndrome. We present a family with von hippel-lindau disease in which four first degree relatives had a cerebellar hemangioblastoma. This neoplasm caused the death of two brothers aged 27 and 24 years old, respectively and their mother aged 62. The third son of this family was affected ten years ago, at the age of 30. The healthy family members are counselled in Oncological Genetic Outpatient Unit in Gdansk.
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5/131. Somatic mosaicism in von hippel-lindau disease.

    von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease is an autosomal dominant familial cancer syndrome predisposing to the development of retinal and central nervous system haemangioblastomas, pheochromocytomas, renal and pancreatic cancer. In the course of a molecular analysis conducted to detect germline mutations of this gene in von Hippel-Lindau patients and individuals affected by sporadic tumors, we have identified a case of somatic mosaicism in the asymptomatic mother of a VHL patient who was subsequently diagnosed with pheochromocytoma. This is the first report providing molecular evidence of somatic mosaicism in von hippel-lindau disease. mosaicism could provide some genetic explanation for the clinical heterogeneity and variable severity of the VHL phenotype, and should be considered, as a possible event when evaluating sporadic cases of VHL or patients with isolated VHL-related tumors. Hum Mutat 15:114, 2000.
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6/131. Relapse of acute myelogenous leukemia as a cerebellar myeloblastoma showing megakaryoblastic differentiation.

    Myeloblastomas (granulocytic sarcomas) occurring within the central nervous system (CNS) are extremely rare lesions that may develop in patients with acute or chronic myeloproliferative disorders. The majority of such lesions involve brain or spinal cord by contiguous spread from meningeal or bony sites, rather than originating within the CNS parenchyma. We describe a patient with acute myelogenous leukemia in remission, who developed a purely intraparenchymal cerebellar myeloblastoma with megakaryocytic differentiation. The neoplastic cells expressed the megakaryocytic markers factor viii-related antigen and platelet glycoprotein-IIIa (CD61), and showed ultrastructural features that were indicative of megakaryocytic differentiation. Clinically, myeloblastomas of the CNS invoke a broad differential diagnosis that includes abscess, hemorrhage, and metastatic neoplasms because of their intraparenchymal location and radiologic features. Although they are rare, myeloblastomas should be included in the histopathologic differential diagnosis of a poorly differentiated neoplasm occurring within the CNS, particularly in a patient with a history of myeloproliferative or myelodysplastic disease.
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7/131. Signet-ring cell ependymoma: case report with implications for pathogenesis and differential diagnosis.

    We describe light microscopic, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features of a signet-ring cell ependymoma (WHO grade II) identified in a surgically resected left cerebellar cystic tumor from a 64-year-old man. Part of the tumor showed clear-cell differentiation. Immunohistochemical coexpression of glial fibrillary acidic protein and epithelial membrane antigen, characteristic of ependymoma, was detected in both components. Sinuous intermediate junctions, cytoplasmic lumina, and scant astroglial filaments were demonstrated by electron microscopy. Signet-ring cell change was shown to be induced by disproportionate cavitation of either microvillus-bearing cytoplasmic lumina or microrosettes. The staining qualities of clear cells were mainly due to paucity and degeneration of subcellular organelles. Therefore, signet-ring cell ependymomas represent a unique anomaly of intra- and extracellular compartmentalization to be distinguished from various unrelated forms of cytoplasmic volume increase, resulting in an optically similar "empty" appearance of tumor cells. As a clinically relevant consequence, signet-ring cell ependymoma must be included in the differential diagnosis of primary or metastatic neoplasms of the central nervous system, having in common a phenotype characterized by overdeveloped optically lucent cell bodies.
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8/131. Intracerebellar chloroma (granulocytic sarcoma): a neurosurgical complication of acute myelocytic leukemia.

    A discrete intracerebellar mass of myeloblasts was found in a 26-year-old woman with acute myelocytic leukemia in remission. This chloroma (granulocytic sarcoma) was treated successfully by surgical extirpation. An aggressive neurosurgical role seems appropriate in handling central nervous system leukemic nodules in view of the improved patient survival created by current chemotherapy regimens.
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9/131. Ovarian carcinoma relapsing as a cerebellopontine angle tumour.

    Involvement of the central nervous system in epithelial ovarian carcinoma is rare. A 46-year-old woman with ovarian carcinoma relapsing with brain metastasis is described. She received radiotherapy for the metastasis and survived for 18 months.
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10/131. central nervous system complications of von hippel-lindau disease and pregnancy; perinatal considerations: case report and literature review.

    A 30-year-old woman with von hippel-lindau disease presented at 30 weeks' gestation with a symptomatic cerebellar hemangioblastoma. She underwent a craniotomy for complete removal of the tumor. The postoperative period and the remaining of the pregnancy were uneventful. She delivered under epidural anesthesia after induction for postterm.
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