Cases reported "Brain Neoplasms"

Filter by keywords:



Filtering documents. Please wait...

1/865. Lymphomatosis cerebri presenting as a rapidly progressive dementia: clinical, neuroimaging and pathologic findings.

    Primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) usually presents with clinical and neuroimaging findings consistent with single or multiple intracranial mass lesions. On cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), such lesions are nearly always contrast enhancing, reflecting disruption of the blood-brain barrier at the site of tumor nodules. We describe 2 cases from the UCLA Medical Center who developed a rapidly progressive dementia due to extensive gray and white matter cerebral lesions involving much of the brain. In the patient who came to autopsy, widely infiltrating, focally necrotic B-cell plasmacytoid lymphoma was noted throughout the cerebral neuraxis. MRI findings in case 2 were consistent with diffuse lymphomatous brain infiltration without mass lesions, which was biopsy proven. We conclude that PCNSL may occur in a diffusely infiltrating form which may occur without MRI evidence of mass lesions or blood-brain barrier compromise. We refer to this entity as 'lymphomatosis cerebri' and add it to the differential diagnosis of a rapidly progressive dementia.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = contrast
(Clic here for more details about this article)

2/865. Severe ocular and orbital toxicity after intracarotid etoposide phosphate and carboplatin therapy.

    PURPOSE: To report severe ocular and orbital toxicity after administration of intracarotid etoposide phosphate and carboplatin. METHOD: Case report. RESULTS: A 52-year-old man with glioblastoma multiforme underwent left intracarotid administration of eto poside phosphate and carboplatin inferior to the ophthalmic artery. Within 7 hours, a nonpupillary block angle-closure glaucoma developed secondary to uveal effusion in the ipsilateral eye, which was relieved by cycloplegia. Four days later, severe orbital inflammation resulted in a visual acuity of counting fingers, proptosis, optic neuropathy, and total external ophthalmoplegia in the eye. The patient's condition improved after a lateral cantholysis and administration of high-dose intravenous corticosteroids. Two weeks later, an anterior uveitis occurred in the left eye, which responded to topical corticosteroids. During a 2-month period, the patient recovered to a visual acuity of 20/70, near normal motility, and normal intraocular pressure, and the ocular and orbital inflammation resolved. Preexisting ipsilateral chemotherapy-induced maculopathy became more pronounced. CONCLUSION: Ocular and orbital toxicity after intracarotid etoposide phosphate and carboplatin therapy is infrequently reported.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.55118064947326
keywords = visual
(Clic here for more details about this article)

3/865. Increased risk of erythema multiforme major with combination anticonvulsant and radiation therapies.

    erythema multiforme major (EMM; stevens-johnson syndrome) is a cutaneous disorder associated with a wide variety of factors including ingestion of drugs such as phenytoin and exposure to intracranial radiation therapy. Based on observations of a 47-year-old black man with brain metastases who developed EMM after combined phenytoin and radiation therapy, we conducted a medline literature search for articles on similar cases from 1966 to the present. Twenty cases were identified that support the hypothesis that EMM is associated with combined phenytoin and radiation therapy. The reaction, or its severity, has no relationship to the phenytoin or radiation therapy dosage, or to the histologic type of brain tumor. Also, EMM has no apparent age or gender predisposition in association with phenytoin-radiation therapy. Thus this is a clinical phenomenon that occurs with unusual frequency in patients with brain tumor who undergo radiation therapy while taking phenytoin. phenytoin and other anticonvulsants such as phenobarbital and carbamazepine induce cytochrome P450 3A and produce oxidative reactive intermediates that may be implicated in hypersensitivity reactions such as EMM. Both carbamazepine and barbiturates have shown cross-sensitivity with phenytoin; furthermore, a case of EMM in a patient receiving carbamazepine and whole brain radiation therapy has been reported. As carbamazepine, valproate, and barbiturates have been associated with EMM, gabapentin may be considered as alternative anticonvulsant therapy when appropriate.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.66102214644821
keywords = sensitivity
(Clic here for more details about this article)

4/865. Cerebral metastasis presenting with altitudinal field defect.

    A 75-year-old man presented with a unilateral inferior altitudinal visual field defect and a history of weight loss and night sweats. The acuity in the affected eye was 20/200, otherwise his ocular examination was normal. neuroimaging demonstrated a post-fixed chiasm, with a frontal metastasis compressing the intracerebral portion of the optic nerve. A chest x-ray showed classical cannon ball lesions, secondary to malignant melanoma. This is the first case report of an intracerebral tumor producing an inferior altitudinal field defect.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.27559032473663
keywords = visual
(Clic here for more details about this article)

5/865. Lymphocytic hypophysitis with central diabetes insipidus and consequent panhypopituitarism preceding a multifocal, intracranial germinoma in a prepubertal girl.

    We report the clinical course of a prepubertal girl with central diabetes insipidus (DI) and consequent panhypopituitarism evolving over a period of 10 years due to lymphocytic hypophysitis and subsequent germinoma. Two years after the diagnosis of central DI was established, MRI revealed a thickened pituitary stalk. Later pituitary enlargement and increasing thickening of the pituitary stalk impinging on the optic chiasm required a trans-sphenoidal biopsy which disclosed active hypophysitis with lymphocytic infiltrates and necrosis. High dose dexamethasone treatment only temporarily halted the disease process. Therefore, stereotactic radiation therapy was performed as a rescue treatment and MRI findings almost reversed. However, the subsequent MRI showed multiple intracranial lesions identified histologically as a germinoma and a standard chemotherapy and radiation was performed. CONCLUSION: The diagnosis of diabetes insipidus in children requires long-term follow up beyond the pubertal age in order to establish the underlying cause. In contrast to lymphocytic hypophysitis in adults, lymphocytic hypophysitis in prepubertal children may represent the first sign of a host reaction to an occult germinoma.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = contrast
(Clic here for more details about this article)

6/865. role of diffusion-weighted echo-planar MRI in distinguishing between brain brain abscess and tumour: a preliminary report.

    Our purpose was to evaluate diffusion-weighted (DW) echo-planar MRI in differentiating between brain abscess and tumour. We examined two patients with surgically confirmed pyogenic brain abscess and 18 with metastatic brain tumours or high-grade glioma, using a 1.5 T system. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of each necrotic or solid contrast-enhancing lesion was measured with two different b values (20 and 1200 s/mm2). All capsule-stage brain abscesses (4 lesions) and zones of cerebritis (2 lesions) were identified on high-b-value DWI as markedly high-signal areas of decreased ADC (range, 0.58-0.70 [(10-3 mm2/s; mean, 0.63)]). All cystic or necrotic portions of brain tumours (14 lesions) were identified on high-b-value DWI as low-signal areas of increased ADC (range, 2.20-3.20 [(10-3 mm2/s; mean, 2.70)]). Solid, contrast-enhancing portions of brain tumours (19 lesions) were identified on high-b-value DWI as high-signal areas of sightly decreased or increased ADC (range, 0.77-1.29 [(10-3 mm2/s; mean, 0.94)]). Our preliminary results indicate that DW echo-planar MRI be used for distinguishing between brain abscess and tumour.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 2
keywords = contrast
(Clic here for more details about this article)

7/865. Suprasellar cystic germinoma.

    We report on a germinoma in the suprasellar region, which had multiple large cystic components. A 13-year-old girl with disturbed visual acuity and growth retardation was admitted to our hospital for treatment of an intracranial tumor. The lesion was difficult to diagnose as a germinoma preoperatively, because of its radiographic characteristics. Histopathological examination revealed that the tumor was a germinoma. Surgery, chemotherapy with carboplatin and etoposide, and radiotherapy (30 Gy) were successful in inducing complete remission of the tumor. The patient's endocrine status remained normal, except for a low GH concentration and diabetes insipidus.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.27559032473663
keywords = visual
(Clic here for more details about this article)

8/865. Intracranial cavernomas: indications for and results of surgery.

    Between April 1991 and April 1997, 46 patients were treated in our department presenting with intracranial cavernomas. Initial symptoms were focal seizures, bleeding episodes, and/or headaches. Mean age was 41 year (range 9 to 68 years). There were 24 female and 22 male patients. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging were performed in order to establish the diagnosis, angiography was only indicated when the hemorrhaged area was so close to the subarachnoid space in the vicinity of the basal cisterns that an aneurysm had to be ruled out. Aggressive indication for surgery also in brainstem cavernomas was based on the natural history of the lesion, since the majority of patients presenting with intracranial bleeding had suffered several (up to six) episodes of previous hemorrhages. patients' clinical status upon admission and accessibility of the cavernoma were taken into account for planning the operation. The operative planning and approach were greatly facilitated by using a neuronavigational device and intraoperative electrophysiological monitoring particularly in cavernomas located in the brainstem, thalamus, and medulla oblongata. Surgical removal of the lesions resulted in a new permanent neurological deficit only in two patients (4%). These data show that patients benefit from modern neurosurgical techniques in contrast to conservative approach in this disease of rather prolonged natural course.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = contrast
(Clic here for more details about this article)

9/865. Surgery of angiomas in the brainstem with a stress on the presence of telangiectasia.

    This report deals with the surgery of angiomas other than arteriovenous malformation in the brainstem. The surgical cases were three cavernomas, two telangiectasias, and two venous malformations. We performed surgery when an angioma bled and the resulting hematoma was situated near the surface of the brainstem or the fourth ventricle. The cases were operated on at the subacute or chronic stages after hemorrhage. Although a magnetic resonance (MR) image showed a subacute or chronic localized hematoma with a low intensity rim, the case was not always a cavernoma, but a telangiectasia. Cavernomas could be totally removed, but telangiectasia could not. In the cases of medullary venous malformation the diagnosis was obtained radiologically, and when the hematoma was large, only hematoma evacuation was performed. In all cases the postoperative Karnofsky scores were improved or unchanged. Postoperative rebleeding in the hematoma cavity continued insidiously in a case of telangiectasia. The abnormal vessels of telangiectasia in the brainstem were preoperatively not visualized by cerebral angiography or MR imaging, but became visualized by enhanced MR imaging after evacuation of hematoma in two cases. It is stressed that an angioma with a hematoma intensity core surrounded by a low intensity rim on MR images is not always a cavernoma, but possibly is a telangiectasia.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.55118064947326
keywords = visual
(Clic here for more details about this article)

10/865. Extraventricular neurocytoma with ganglionic differentiation associated with complex partial seizures.

    We report an unusual case of extraventricular ("cerebral") neurocytoma with ganglion cells located in the right temporal lobe in a 9-year-old girl with complex partial seizures and precocious puberty. CT showed a calcified mass with central cystic zones. MR imaging showed a markedly hyperintense predominately solid tumor on both T1- and T2-weighted images, without appreciable contrast enhancement. Cerebral neurocytomas are histologically benign and radical surgery is curative; they should be included in the differential diagnosis of temporal lobe tumors in children.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = contrast
(Clic here for more details about this article)
| Next ->


Leave a message about 'Brain Neoplasms'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.