Cases reported "Brain Neoplasms"

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1/559. 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.
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2/559. Middle ear adenocarcinoma with intracranial extension. Case report.

    Middle ear adenocarcinoma is a very rare, locally invasive neoplasm assumed to arise from the middle ear mucosa. Although endolymphatic sac tumor (aggressive papillary middle ear tumor) and jugulotympanic paraganglioma may show brain invasion, intracranial extension of histologically confirmed middle ear adenocarcinoma has not been previously reported. The authors describe a 53-year-old man who suffered from otalgia and tinnitus for more than 10 years and from neurological deficits for 1 year due to a large temporal bone tumor that invaded the temporal lobe. A combined neurosurgical and otolaryngological resection was performed. Pathological analysis revealed a low-grade adenocarcinoma of a mixed epithelial-neuroendocrine phenotype, which showed a close histological similarity to, and topographical relationship with, middle ear epithelium. The authors conclude that middle ear adenocarcinoma belongs to the spectrum of extracranial tumors that have possible local extension to the brain.
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3/559. Integration of preoperative and intraoperative functional brain mapping in a frameless stereotactic environment for lesions near eloquent cortex. Technical note.

    The authors present a method of incorporating preoperative noninvasive functional brain mapping data into the frameless stereotactic magnetic resonance (MR) imaging dataset used for image-guided resection of brain lesions located near eloquent cortex. They report the use of functional (f)MR imaging and magnetic source (MS) imaging for preoperative mapping of eloquent cortex in difficult cases of brain tumor resection such as those in which there are large expansive masses or in which reoperations are required and the anatomy is distorted from prior treatments. To correlate methods of preoperative and intraoperative mapping localization directly, the authors have developed techniques of importing preoperative MS and fMR imaging data into an image-guided frameless stereotactic computer workstation. The data appear as a seamless overlay on the same preoperative volumetric MR imaging dataset used for stereotactic guidance during the operation. Intraoperatively identified functional locations mapped by cortical stimulation are recorded as digitally registered points. This approach should prove useful in assessing the accuracy and reliability of various preoperative functional brain mapping techniques.
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4/559. Composite ganglioglioma and dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor.

    Both ganglioglioma and dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors are well-recognized glial-neuronal neoplasms associated with chronic epilepsy and cortical dysplasia (neuronal migration abnormalities). The exact relationship between these 2 glial-neuronal tumors continues to be debated. This article reports a case of a composite ganglioglioma and dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor occurring in a 36-year-old woman in the left temporal lobe region. The resection histologically demonstrated distinct areas of ganglioglioma and dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor. A focal area of cortical dysplasia is also identified. The MIB-1 labeling indexes in both components were low (<1% of tumor cell nuclei). The coexistence of these 2 lesions and cortical dysplasia suggest a possible etiologic relationship between these 2 tumors.
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5/559. movement disorders following nonfunctional neurosurgery.

    OBJECT: knowledge is scarce about movement disorders that follow neurosurgical operations other than functional stereotactic surgery. The cases of 14 patients who suffered from movement disorders secondary to craniocerebral or spinal surgery are analyzed. None of these patients was initially treated by any of the authors. methods: Twelve patients underwent surgery for cerebral diseases. Nine of these patients harbored tumors and three patients had neurovascular disorders. Two patients underwent spinal surgery for cervicothoracic ependymoma or for multiple cervical disc herniations. Twelve of the 14 patients had immediate postoperative side effects such as hemiparesis, ataxia, and somnolence. In all but two patients, movement disorders became manifest only after a delay. Dystonic movement disorders developed in eight patients, unilateral tremors in three patients, unilateral facial myokymia in one patient, and hemichorea-hemiballism in two patients. The mean delay of onset for tremor was 5 weeks and that for dystonic movement disorders was 5.5 months. movement disorders were transient in three patients; however, they were persistent in 11 patients at a mean follow-up period of 5 years. These movement disorders caused marked persistent disability in four patients. Lesions of the contralateral striatum were identified in patients with dystonic syndromes and lesions of the dentatothalamic outflow in patients with tremors. In three patients who had postoperative basal ganglia lesions after partial removal of astrocytomas, tumor regrowth was later documented. Medical treatment in patients with persistent movement disorders rendered only limited benefit. Two patients improved with botulin injections. In one patient postoperative hemidystonia was alleviated by contralateral thalamotomy. CONCLUSIONS: Dystonic syndromes and tremors are the most common movement disorders that occur after craniocerebral and spinal surgery. Postoperative movement disorders can lead to various degrees of functional disability. The pathoanatomical correlations are similar to those described in other patients with secondary movement disorders.
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6/559. Minimally invasive stereotactically-guided extirpation of brain stem cavernoma with the aid of electrophysiological methods.

    The surgical extirpation of brain stem cavernomas always includes a risk of neurological deficits. To minimize the risk of deficits and control the motor and sensory function intraoperative monitoring of SEP and MEP seems to be helpful. The high density of motor and sensory fibers within the brain stem makes bilateral intraoperative monitoring necessary. The following case demonstrates a stereotactically-guided supratentorial, transventricular approach for extirpation of a brain stem cavernoma. Sensory and motoric functions were observed by transcranial recording of SEP's and by transcranial stimulation of motor cortex.
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7/559. Giant aneurysms of the posterior fossa presenting as space occupying lesions.

    In relation to the case history of a patient, who was observed at the Ursula Clinic, Wassenaar, Holland, a survey from the literature is given of 47 cases of giant aneurysms of the posterior fossa, which primarily presented as space occupying lesions.
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8/559. Primary cerebral neuroblastoma. A clinicopathological study of 35 cases.

    A series of 35 primary cerebral neuroblastoma is reported. These rare tumours occur most often in children in the first half of the first decade. Grossly the tumors are often massive, discrete, lobular, firm and cystic. Histologically three variants, largely determined by the extent and distribution of the fibrous connective tissue stroma, are recognized: (1) a classical variant, which most resembles the peripheral neuroblastoma and is characterized by a high frequency of Homer Wright rosettes and a relatively high frequency of ganglionic differentiation; (2) a desmoplastic variant, which is characterized by an intense connective tissue stroma; and (3) a transitional variant, in which both the classical and the desmoplastic features may be present within the same case, either concurrently or consecutively. Both the desmoplastic and the transitional forms are less likely to exhibit differentiation to mature ganglion cells, but the importance of identifying the primitive cell elements as neuroblasts is emphasized. With rare exceptions, this can be established only by specific silver impregnations on frozen material. Occasionally the direction of growth may be largely leptomeningeal. Seven illustrative clinical histories with pathological correlations are described. The over-all clinical behaviour of these tumours is that of malignant neuroepithelial neoplasms, characterized by a high recurrence rate. recurrence may, however, be a late development, in some cases occurring five or seven years after apparently successful surgical removal. The tumour shows shows a high incidence of metastatic spread, almost 40 per cent of the cases examined at autopsy having disseminated in the cerebrospinal pathways. Exceptionally, extraneural metastases may also develop. However, long post-operative survival occasionally occurs, and the subsequent clinical course is not always predictable in the individual case. The differential diagnosis is briefly discussed. The cellular nature of the tumour and its biological behaviour recall those of the cerebellar medulloblastoma. Post-operative radiation to the entire neuraxis should be considered for these neoplasms.
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9/559. Gliomatosis cerebri with secondary glioblastoma formation: report of two cases.

    The clinicopathological features of two cases of gliomatosis cerebri associated with secondary glioblastoma formation are reported. In both cases, glial cells were diffusely distributed in the supra- and infratentorial regions and underlying brain structures were preserved from the onset. In spite of such diffuse distribution of neoplastic glial cells, similar to that observed in low-grade astrocytoma, in both cases the tumor underwent complete remission after radiotherapy. However, the tumor recurred as a localized glioblastoma in both cases, 37 months (case 1) and 7 months (case 2) after the radiotherapy. In both cases, recurrence was accompanied by prominent dissemination of CSF. The recurrent tumors were radiation resistant, and the patients' conditions deteriorated rapidly after recurrence. The present two cases demonstrated that gliomatosis cerebri, classified among brain tumors of unknown origin by the world health organization, may transform into highly proliferative circumscribed tumors, in spite of their good response to radiotherapy. Examination of pathological features and their correlation with MRI findings may allow us to better understand the response to radiotherapy and the process of recurrence.
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10/559. Calcification of presumed ovarian carcinoma brain metastases following radiotherapy.

    Multiple brain metastases from ovarian carcinoma are rare. CT findings are reported in a case treated with whole brain radiation therapy and chemotherapy. Radiological complete-calcified brain metastases following treatment and long morphological changes occurred. Delayed neurological findings in relation to treatment are considered. Long survival with unmodified calcified lesions may suggest a stabilization of CNS disease.
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