Cases reported "Cerebellar Neoplasms"

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1/42. 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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keywords = radiation-induced
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2/42. 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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ranking = 0.0077565168965023
keywords = leukemia
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3/42. 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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ranking = 0.0077565168965023
keywords = leukemia
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4/42. Radiation-induced cavernous angioma mimicking metastatic disease.

    patients with carcinoma of the lung typically have a limited life expectancy especially after developing metastatic disease in the brain. New enhancing lesions in the brain are usually felt to represent new areas of metastasis. Recently, there have been several case reports of cavernous angiomas appearing years after radiation to the brain, typically in children. We present a case of a 41-year-old gentleman with carcinoma of the lung with metastasis to the brain who received postoperative radiation. Five-and-a-half years later he presented with a new enhancing lesion of the brain with surrounding vasogenic oedema, thought to represent a metastatic tumour. It proved is the a radiation-induced cavernous angioma.
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keywords = radiation-induced
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5/42. Malignant glioma as a secondary malignant neoplasm after radiation therapy for craniopharyngioma: report of a case and review of reported cases.

    BACKGROUND: The development of a secondary neoplasm in childhood cancer survivors attains growing importance due to the reported excellent survival and therefore the long exposure to potentially carcinogenic effects of treatment. CASE REPORT: We report a 14-year-old girl in whom a large craniopharyngioma (CP) was diagnosed. After surgery, radiation therapy (RT) was given for residual tumour. Discrete progression necessitated further surgery, resulting in permanent tumour control. Soon after the second surgery hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction developed together with obesity. Supportive hormone therapy was initiated. growth hormone (GH) therapy was also given for 15 months. Four years after the diagnosis, a cerebropontine anaplastic astrocytoma WHO grade III was detected, with the main lesion being at the dorsal edge of the irradiated area. The girl died 1 month later from this secondary presumably radiation-induced tumour. Only recently a second child with RT for a CP was diagnosed with malignant glioma in our hospital. case reports IN THE literature: 12 other cases of malignant glioma have been reported after RT for CP. Including our present cases, the mean latency period was 10.7 years (median 9.6 years). However, the shortest latency periods were found in patients who had received GH therapy. In numerous cases, the secondary tumour was seen at the edge of the irradiated volume, and not in the region with the highest absorbed dose. CONCLUSIONS: Therapy-induced secondary gliomas after treatment of CP or other intracranial tumours are rare but dramatic late events with a very poor prognosis. Including our own 2 patients, we reviewed 14 cases of CP with occurrence of a secondary, probably radiation-induced malignant glioma. The short latency periods for patients treated with GH is remarkable. We therefore suspect that GH therapy may accelerate the development of a secondary brain tumour. We are reluctant to recommend GH therapy in conventionally irradiated CP patients. In order to seriously answer the questions about therapy-induced secondary neoplasms, a life-long follow-up is mandatory for all patients who are survivors of childhood cancer.
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ranking = 2
keywords = radiation-induced
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6/42. Fulminant radiation-induced necrosis after stereotactic radiation therapy to the posterior fossa. Case report and review of the literature.

    The problem of radiation-induced necrosis of normal brain surrounding the target area has been a major catalyst for the development of stereotactically focused radiation therapy. According to current opinion, the effects of stereotactic irradiation are confined to the region targeted. The authors present a case in which the administration of a conventional dose of stereotactically focused irradiation for treatment of a pilocytic astrocytoma produced fulminant necrosis that necessitated a combination of intensive surgical and medical management, after which the patient improved over the course of 1 year. Concomitant with his improvement, the initially remarkable findings on magnetic resonance imaging gradually resolved. In this presentation the authors emphasize the need to evaluate alternatives carefully before a decision is made to administer therapeutic irradiation. Furthermore, they explore the roles that target, host, and dosage factors play in hypersensitivity to radiation injury, the detection of these factors before treatment, and the administration of radioprotective agents. With the growing use of stereotactically focused irradiation as a primary treatment modality for a variety of neurosurgical conditions, it is important to be cognizant of its uncommon but potentially lethal side effects. A cooperative multicenter database in which the outcomes and morbidity following stereotactic irradiation are recorded is essential to the detection of relatively uncommon but severe complications such as those observed in this case.
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ranking = 5
keywords = radiation-induced
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7/42. Cerebellar granulocytic sarcoma in an infant with CD56 acute monoblastic leukemia.

    Granulocytic sarcoma (GS) is a form of extramedullary leukaemia (EML). The presence of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) on the surface of the blasts, which is recognized by the CD56 monoclonal antibody, enhances their propensity for tissue penetration. GS within the central nervous system (CNS), in particular within the cerebellum, is extremely uncommon. We review the literature and describe an infant with isolated cerebellar GS relapse, which antedated a CD56 acute monoblastic leukaemia bone marrow (BM) relapse.
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ranking = 0.0062052135172019
keywords = leukemia
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8/42. Radiation-induced osteochondroma of the T4 vertebra causing spinal cord compression.

    A case of a radiation-induced osteochondroma arising from the vertebral body of T4 in an 18-year-old man is reported. The patient presented with a history of progressive left lower extremity weakness. At 7 years of age, he had undergone resection of a cerebellar medulloblastoma and received adjunctive craniospinal irradiation and systemic chemotherapy. Both CT and MR imaging revealed an extradural mass contiguous with the posteroinferior endplate of the T4 vertebral body. This case indicates that radiation-induced osteochondroma should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with symptoms of myelopathy or nerve root compression and a history of radiation therapy involving the spine in childhood.
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ranking = 2
keywords = radiation-induced
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9/42. Atypical tentorial meningioma 30 years after radiotherapy for a pituitary adenoma.

    Although the human central nervous system used to be considered relatively resistant to the carcinogenic action of ionizing radiation, several lines of evidence now document a high incidence of secondary tumors in irradiated patients. The numerous reports of radiation-induced cerebral meningiomas generally distinguish those induced by high-dose radiation from those induced by low-dose radiation. We describe the case of patient who underwent subtotal resection of a chromophobe pituitary adenoma at the age of 18 years, who was successively treated by conventional fractionated radiotherapy with gamma rays emitted by a source of 60Co until a total dose of 41 Gy. Over the next 30 years the patient experienced all the known late effects of radiation, including panhypopituitarism, cranial-nerve deficits (II, III and VI), massive radiation necrosis involving the left cerebral hemisphere and causing right hemiparesis and aphasia and, ultimately, an atypical tentorial meningioma with early recurrence after total resection.
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ranking = 1
keywords = radiation-induced
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10/42. medulloblastoma with adverse reaction to radiation therapy in nijmegen breakage syndrome.

    A 3-year-old child with microcephaly, facial dysmorphism, growth retardation, and developmental delay was diagnosed with medulloblastoma. craniospinal irradiation resulted in severe radiation-induced dermatitis and gastroesophagitis, unresponsive to further medical therapy. Colony survival assay on the patient's transformed lymphocytes revealed a high degree of radiosensitivity ex vivo. The presence of radiation sensitivity, both clinically and ex vivo, in association with microcephaly and growth retardation, prompted a diagnostic workup for nijmegen breakage syndrome. The patient was confirmed to have a compound heterozygote genotype for the common founder mutation of NBS1 675del5 in exon 6, and 1142delC in exon 10. Because irradiation is an important component of therapy for brain tumors, caution should be exercised in cancer patients with associated microcephaly and growth retardation, as they may turn out to have the rare diagnosis of nijmegen breakage syndrome.
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ranking = 1
keywords = radiation-induced
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