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#3. Recognize specific syndromes; extra-axial (cerebellopontine, pituitary, frontal) and intraaxial in brain tumor presentation Extra-axial Tumors • Extrinsic to the brain • include meningiomas, schwannomas, neurofibromas, and pituitary tumors, craniopharyngiomas as well as mesenchymal tumors of the skull, spine, and dura mater Meningioma • Derived from arachnoid cap cells of the arachnoid mater • Appear to arise from the dura mater grossly and on MRI: “dural based tumors” • Most common intracranial locations: along the falx cerebri , the convexities and the sphenoid wing. • Less common locations: foramen magnum, olfactory groove, and inside the lateral ventricle Meningioma • Mostly slow growing, encapsulated, and benign • Malignant may invade adjacent bone or into the cortex • Previous cranial irradiation: risk • Tx: Total resection, post op radiation (atypical and malignant melanoma) Postcontrast T1-weighted coronal MRI demonstrating a brightly enhancing lesion arising from the falx cerebri with moderate edema and mass effect on the right lateral ventricle. This is a falcine meningioma. Note also the small separate meningioma arising from the dura over the cerebral convexity. Vestibular Schwannoma (Acoustic Neuroma) • Arise from the superior half of the vestibular portion of the vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII) • commonly present with progressive hearing loss, tinnitus, or balance difficulty • Large tumors may cause brain stem compression and obstructive hydrocephalus • Bilateral acoustic neuromas are pathognomonic for neurofibromatosis type 2, a syndrome resulting from chromosome 22 mutation. Vestibular Schwannoma (Acoustic Neuroma) • Tx: microsurgical resection or with conformal stereotactic radiosurgery (gamma knife or linear accelerator technology) • Complication: damage to the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII) A. Postcontrast T1-weighted axial MRI demonstrating a brightly enhancing mass on the right vestibular nerve with an enhancing tail going into the internal auditory canal (arrowhead). Pathology demonstrated vestibular schwannoma Pituitary Adenoma • arise from the anterior pituitary gland (the adenohypophysis). • Microadenoma: <1cm; Macroadenoma >1 cm • Functional (i.e., secrete endocrinologically active compounds at pathologic levels) or nonfunctional (i.e., secrete nothing or inactive compounds). • The most common endocrine syndromes are Cushing's disease due to adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) secretion, Forbes-Albright syndrome due to prolactin secretion, and acromegaly due to growth hormone secretion. Pituitary Adenoma • Nonfunctional tumors commonly present when larger due to mass effect. • Common symptoms : visual field deficits due to compression of the optic chiasm, or panhypopituitarism due to compression of the gland. • Tx: Surgery (Transphenoidal), medical (Prolactinomas) Postcontrast T1-weighted sagittal MRI demonstrating a large sellar/suprasellar lesion involving the third ventricle superiorly, and abutting the midbrain and pons posteriorly. The patient presented with progressive visual field and acuity loss. Pathology and lab work revealed a nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma. Hemangioblastoma • occur almost exclusively in the posterior fossa. • Twenty percent occur in patients with von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease, a multisystem neoplastic disorder • Appears as cystic tumors with an enhancing tumor on the cyst wall known as the mural nodule. • Surgical resection is curative for sporadic (nonVHL associated) tumors. Craniopharyngioma • Benign cystic lesions that occur most frequently in children. • Second peak of occurrence around 50 years of age. • Symptoms result from compression of adjacent structures, especially the optic chiasm, pituitary or hypothalamic dysfunction or hydrocephalus may develop. • Treatment is primarily surgical • Complications: Visual loss, pituitary endocrine hypofunction, diabetes insipidus, and cognitive impairment from basal frontal injury Neurofibroma • more fusiform and grow within the parent nerve, rather than forming an encapsulated mass off the nerve, as with schwannomas. • They are benign but not encapsulated. • They present similarly to schwannomas and the two may be difficult to differentiate on imaging. • Patients with multiple neurofibromas likely have neurofibromatosis type 1, also known as von Recklinghausen's neurofibromatosis. • Resection for symptomatic lesions should be offered. Intra-axial Tumors • Intrinsic to the brain GLIOMA • ASTROCYTOMA: - MOST COMMON PRIMARY INTRA-AXIAL BRAIN TUMOR (low & high grade) - INVOLVE ALL LOBES WITH PREFERENTIAL TO FRONTAL & TEMPORAL LOBES - GRADING BASED ON HISTOLOGY: hypercellularity pleomorphism vascular proliferation necrosis - DIAGNOSIS: CT, MRI, Angiography - TREATMENT: Surgery, Radiation, Chemotheraphy or Combination ASTROCYTOMA Pilocytic Astrocytoma Grade I Low Grade Astrocytoma Grade II Anaplastic Astrocytoma Grade III Glioblastoma Multiforme Grade IV Median Age 13 years 35-45 years 46 years 50-60 years Incidence 2% of gliomas 5%-25% of gliomas 10%-30% of gliomas 45%-50% of gliomas Location Cerebellum, Brain stem, Optic nerve, Cerebral hemisphere Cerebral hemispheres (frontal 40%), pons thalamus, midbrain Cerebral hemispheres, thalamus, midbrain, pons Any region particularly cerebral hemispheres (frontal 40%) Presentation Depending on site, inc. ICP, seizures, motor deficit Seizures(65%), Incr.ICP, Mental status change, motor deficit Seizures(50%), Incr.ICP, Mental status change, motor deficit Increased ICP, mental changes, motor deficit, seizures Treatment Surgical resection Surgical resection Sx resection, radiaion, chemoRx Sx resection, radiaion, chemoRx Outcome 5 year survival 100% 26%-33% 18% 5.5% OLIGODENDROGLIOMA Incidence 2-10% Age of predilection 30-55 yrs Gender distribution Slightly more men (3:2) Location Frontal, temporal, parietal often towards the midline Cardinal clinical symptoms Seizures (50%-80%) CT native Image as for astrocytma II or III, calcifications in about 50% of the cases, occasionally cysts, “fried egg” cytoplasm CT after contrast medium Enhancement of Grade III tumors only; variegated picture, slight edema Treatment: vary from conservative treatment of some patients with serial imaging studies and no intervention to aggressive multimodal treatment including surgical resection, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy EPENDYMOMA • glial tumors that arise from ependymal cells within the central nervous system Incidence 1-4% Age of predilection 0-20 yrs Gender distribution Predominantly men Location Fourth and third ventricles, lateral ventricles, in childhood frontal, superficial frontier Cardinal clinical symptoms Signs of intracranial pressure increase CT native (10%) Slightly increased density; calcification possible CT after contrast medium Slightly enhancement in solid tumor parts; grades III and IV similar to glioblastoma image KEY FEATURES: -USUALLY OCCUR IN THE FLOOR OF THE 4TH VENTRICLE -POTENTIAL FOR SEEDING THRU THE NEURAXIS -WORSE PROGNOSIS THE YOUNGER THE PATIENT; 5 YRS SURVIVAL AT 80% FOR ADULTS & 20%-30% IN PEDIATRIC GROUP -MAXIMAL RESECTION FOLLOWED BY XRT EPENDYMOMA