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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (
glioblastoma
)
18,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
26 patients, average age of 7.3 years, has biopsies of a brain stem tumor. 62% of the patients presented with
hydrocephalus
, and ventriculoperitoneal shunts were placed 7-10 days prior to biopsy. The midbrain was biopsied 13 times, the pons 3 and the medulla 12 times. Tissue for histopathologic examination was obtained at each operation and demonstrated astrocytoma in 13 patients,
glioblastoma
in 6, 'no tumor seen' in 5 and ependymoma in 2. Astrocytomas were usually located in the upper brain stem, and all of the glioblastomas were located in the medulla. The operative mortality was zero, and the morbidity was largely related to increased cranial nerve deficit. All the astrocytoma patients were treated with radiation only; whereas, 4 patients with
glioblastoma
were treated with vincristine, CCNU and methylprednisone in addition to radiation as described by the Children's Cancer Study Group (CCG-944). 3 patients with 'no tumor' were not treated and are alive and well 15-41 months following operation. 2 patients with no tumor were treated, one as a glioblastoma multiforme, subsequently verified at postmortem examination, and one as a midbrain astrocytoma. 1 patient with astrocytoma died 3 months following operation, all the remainder are living and well 4-51 months following operation. Irrespective of the treatment, all 7 patients with
glioblastoma
expired within 9 months of diagnosis. The prognosis for survival for patients with brain stem astrocytoma is superior to those with glioblastoma multiforme. Specific histopathologic correlation with clinical management may lead to improved and prolonged survival for patients with brain stem glioma.
...
PMID:Biopsy of pediatric brain stem tumors. 45 7
Four term infants were found by computerized cerebral tomography (CT) to have intraventricular hemorrhage. All were male infants who had experienced substantial intrapartum complications. One infant had subtle clinical signs at 2 days of age; the others had major neurologic findings including seizures and ophthalmoplegia that occurred at 1, 4, and 6 weeks of age, respectively. Three infants in whom the hemorrhages were indistinguishable by CT from those described in preterm infants now have arrested
hydrocephalus
and normal development. The fourth infant was found to have a large
glioblastoma
at the site of origin of his initial hemorrhage. These cases emphasize the need to consider this diagnosis in neonates born at term who have abnormal neurologic signs.
...
PMID:Intraventricular hemorrhage in the neonate born at term. 47 46
The author in his present paper reports extensive paraventricular cavitation of the lateral ventricles in a 24-year-old woman with a brain-stem
glioblastoma
. Playing an important etiopathogenetic role in the development of this particular complicatien are a disturbance of the pischarge of liquor due to the expansion in the posterior cranial fossa of the rapidly growing tumor, the internal
hydrocephalus
resulting therefrom, and the acute tumoral hemorrhage accompanied by an invasion of the fourth ventricle and partial internal hematocephalus.
...
PMID:[Unusual paraventricular cavitations as complication of brain stem glioblastoma]. 101 54
The goals of this study were to evaluate 31P MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) for clinical studies and to survey potentially significant spatial variations of 31P metabolite signals in normal and pathological human brains. In normal brains, chemical shifts and metabolite ratios corrected for saturation were similar to previous studies using single-volume localization techniques (n = 10; pH = 7.01 +/- 0.02; PCr/Pi = 2.0 +/- 0.4; PCr/ATP = 1.4 +/- 0.2; ATP/Pi = 1.6 +/- 0.2; PCr/PDE = 0.52 +/- 0.06; PCr/PME = 1.3 +/- 0.2; [Mg2+]free = 0.26 +/- 0.02 mM.) In 17 pathological case studies, ratios of 31P metabolite signals between the pathological regions and normal-appearing (usually homologous contralateral) regions were obtained. First, in subacute and chronic infarctions (n = 9) decreased Pi (65 +/- 12%), PCr (38 +/- 6%), ATP (55 +/- 6%), PDE (47 +/- 9%), and total 31P metabolite signals (50 +/- 8%) were observed. Second, regions of decreased total 31P metabolite signals were observed in normal pressure
hydrocephalus
(NPH, n = 2),
glioblastoma
(n = 2), temporal lobe epilepsy (n = 2), and transient ischemic attacks (TIAs, n = 2). Third, alkalosis was detected in the NPH periventricular tissue,
glioblastoma
, epilepsy ipsilateral ictal foci, and chronic infarction regions; acidosis was detected in subacute infarction regions. Fourth, in TIAs with no MRI-detected infarction, regions consistent with transient neurological deficits were detected with decreased Pi, ATP, and total 31P metabolite signals. These results demonstrate an advantage of 31P MRSI over single-volume 31P MRS techniques in that metabolite information is derived simultaneously from multiple regions of brain, including those outside the primary pathological region of interest. These preliminary findings also suggest that abnormal metabolite distributions may be detected in regions that appear normal on MR images.
...
PMID:Phosphorus-31 MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) of normal and pathological human brains. 156 92
An autopsy case of
glioblastoma
of the cerebellum associated with an intracerebellar hemorrhage and showing CSF seedings is reported. A 26 year-old male was admitted to our hospital with a 10-day history of headache, nausea and vertigo. On admission, disturbance of consciousness (10-20 by JCS), irregular respiration and central fixation of both eyes suggesting increased intracranial pressure and early stage of central herniation were recognized clinically. The cerebellar signs of dysmetria and nystagmus were also observed. CT scan and angiography revealed an avascular large mass in the right cerebellar hemisphere, obstructive
hydrocephalus
and upward transtentorial herniation. On MRI study, the mass was demonstrated to be a subacute hematoma with a small tumor in its margin. Total removal of the tumor and aspiration of the hematoma were performed. Histological examination revealed a highly cellular and pleomorphic astrocytic tumor with scattered small necrosis and glomeruloid capillary endothelial proliferation, typical of glioblastoma multiforme. During postoperative radiochemotherapy (focal irradiation to the posterior fossa), the tumor showed rapid regrowth and a second look operation was performed. He was readmitted 3 weeks after radiochemotherapy with complaints of severe headache, nausea and lumbago. He then suddenly became dyspnea, tetraplegic and bradycardic. Neuroradiological investigation revealed multiple masses in the suprasellar region, medulla oblongata and the cervical spinal cord, but no recurrence in the cerebellum. Malignant cells were noted on CSF cytology. During chemotherapy for CSF tumor dissemination, his condition deteriorated rapidly and he died 7 months after the onset of symptoms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Glioblastoma of the cerebellum: report of an autopsy case associated with intratumoral hemorrhage and CSF seedings]. 165 2
Reported are three cases of a spinal leptomeningeal dissemination from supratentorial malignant gliomas, in which the recurrence of the primary tumors of the intracranial leptomeningeal involvement was not observed clinicopathologically. All cases complained of spinal cord symptoms such as paraplegia or a sensory disturbance from time to time after the initial operation for their intracranial primary tumors. The duration between the first operation and the appearance of the spinal cord symptoms ranged from 11 to 17 months. In all cases, a computerized tomography scan demonstrated no recurrence of the primary tumor and no findings indicating intracranial leptomeningeal gliomatosis, such as a diffuse contrast enhancement of the ventricular wall or the subarachnoidal space, or
hydrocephalus
. Myelography showed a block or an irregular filling defect in two cases given immediate operations for spinal mass lesions. In one of these cases, a well-defined extramedullary tumor was removed at the level of the 7th-8th thoracic vertebrae. The pathological diagnosis was a glioblastoma multiforme, which was similar to the primary tumor. The patient survived for 18 months after total removal of the spinal tumor followed by postoperative spinal irradiation. All patients died of recurrent tumors from 3 to 18 months (mean: 8 months) after the appearance of the spinal cord symptoms. In the other case, an intramedullary tumor was found by a laminectomy. These two cases were autopsied. In one, an intramedullary tumor was found to extend from the lower medulla oblongata to the cervical cord, whereas the recurrence of the primary tumor was not seen and there was no intracranial leptomeningeal invasion nor any spinal subarachnoid seeding. The pathological diagnosis of this intramedullary tumor was a
glioblastoma
. In the other, there was a diffuse leptomeningeal dissemination of glioblastoma multiforme throughout the spinal cord, with an intramedullary invasion to almost all parts. A partial intracranial subarachnoid seeding of a malignant lower grade tumor than seen in the spinal lesion was found, though there was no recurrence of the primary tumor.
...
PMID:[A clinicopathological study of the spinal leptomeningeal dissemination from cerebral malignant gliomas without a recurrence of the primary lesions]. 215 48
Computed tomography (CT) findings in eleven patients with symptomatic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) dissemination from cerebral
glioblastoma
were analyzed and, in seven cases subsequently autopsied, they were compared with histological observations. Each patient had multiple CT abnormalities including periventricular enhancement (5/11), subarachnoid enhancement (10/11) and progressive
hydrocephalus
(7/9) by cranial CT, and small filling defects with or without block (5/5) by CT myelography. The areas that showed periventricular or subarachnoid enhancement on CT were confirmed to have macroscopically detectable seeding at autopsy. On the other hand, microscopic deposits were more widely distributed than the enhancement suggested, and were hardly visualized on CT. In association with subarachnoid seeding, we found low-density lesions on CT which had resulted from ischemia or reinvasion of adjacent structures by disseminated
glioblastoma
and resulting parenchymal edema. By cranial CT, subarachnoid enhancement seems to be a very reliable sign of CSF seeding, whereas periventricular enhancement due to CSF metastases should be carefully distinguished from that due to periventricular tumor infiltration. CT myelography is capable of revealing minute metastatic spinal deposits and may be helpful for ruling out spinal seeding as well as its precise evaluation.
...
PMID:Symptomatic cerebrospinal fluid dissemination of cerebral glioblastoma. Computed tomographic findings in 11 cases. 239 40
A 68-year-old male was hospitalized because of headache, nausea, and disturbance of consciousness. Neurological examination on admission disclosed somnolence, disorientation, marked neck stiffness, papilledema, and quadriparesis. Computed tomography (CT) scanning demonstrated a round mass with marked contrast enhancement in the right sylvian fissure and small contrast-enhanced masses in the interpeduncular, quadrigeminal and ambient cisterns. CT also showed marked peritumoral edema, a midline shift, and
hydrocephalus
. The patient's consciousness level and respiration deteriorated 3 days after admission and a craniotomy was performed. The tumor, which was well demarcated, firmly attached to the sphenoidal ridge, and grossly appeared to be a meningioma, was totally removed. Histologically, the tumor had two well defined components,
glioblastoma
and fibrosarcoma. The patient underwent ventriculoperitoneal shunting, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy after surgery, but the primary tumor soon recurred, with scalp metastasis, and he died 5 months postoperatively. Autopsy revealed metastases to the liver, spleen, and spinal cord. The histogenesis of this mixed tumor and the mechanism of extracranial metastasis are discussed, and the literature is reviewed.
...
PMID:[Gliosarcoma with multiple extracranial metastases. Case report]. 248 46
We report two clinico-pathological cases with an initially hidden brainstem tumour presenting as chronic
hydrocephalus
of "idiopathic type". Diagnosis was established respectively one and two years after a successful shunting procedure, as repeated CT scan was performed because of gait deterioration. The first case was a bifocal
glioblastoma
invading the leptomeninges of the posterior fossa and spinal cord, and resulting in a communicating
hydrocephalus
. The second case was an ependymoma of the fourth ventricle leading to e non-communicating
hydrocephalus
. Rarity of such cases is emphasized.
...
PMID:[Hydrocephalus and brainstem tumor of late manifestation]. 261 72
The case of a 7-year-old girl with a cerebellar
glioblastoma
and extraneural metastases has been presented. The dura mater was left open at the time of tumor resection. Postoperative
hydrocephalus
caused prolonged bulging of the incision. We believe that an open dura mater facilitates continuous exposure of extrameningeal tissue to glioma cells that are capable of invading local lymphatics and extracerebral veins, enhancing the probability of widespread dissemination. We suggest that every effort should be made to close the posterior fossa dura mater after resection of a malignant tumor.
...
PMID:Extraneural metastasis of cerebellar glioblastoma multiforme. 628 98
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