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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (glioma)
30,880 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The findings and diagnostic results in 600 examinations of primary and metastatic intracranial neoplasms performed at one hospital with the EMI scanner are presented and the effectiveness of this method is compared with that of radionuclide imaging, cerebral angiography, and pneumoencephalography. The computed scan proved to be highly reliable in the diagnosis of glioma, cerebral metastases, meningioma, and acoustic neuroma.
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PMID:Computed tomography with the EMI scanner in the diagnosis of primary and metastatic intracranial neoplasms. 110 9

A case is presented in which a meningioma and a glioma grew in the region where, 23 years before, a glial tumor had been partially removed and irradiated. The authors suggest that surgical trauma and ionizing radiation may have influenced the tumor's development.
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PMID:Late appearance of meningioma at the site of partially removed oligodendroglioma. Case report. 114 86

A patient is described who successfully underwent cerebral hemispherectomy for malignant glioma and whose death nine months later, wrongly ascribed to recurrent malignancy, was in fact due to a subsequently-developing benign meningioma in the remaining hemisphere. The possible advantages of a modification of standard hemispherectomy technique are also discussed.
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PMID:Meningioma after contralateral hemispherectomy for malignant glioma: case report. 115 16

The cerebral sequential scintigraphy enables a process to be described according to its hemodynamics (Stage I), its degree of vascularization (Stage II), and the extent of the localized disturbance of the blood-brain barrier function (Stage III). For a given lesion, typical scintigraphic behaviour patterns can be described. This report presents the results of a prospective series with 1722 patients examined using this method. The accuracy of the different scintigraphic diagnoses, according to tumor type, was: cerebrovascular accident with brain infarction - 92% (= CVA), metastasis - 90%, bone or meningital process - 89%, malignant glioma - 91%, meningioma - 74%, highly differentiated glioma - 67%, chronic subdural hematoma - 54%, A-V angioma - 54%, brain abscess - 45%. The differential diagnosis between brain tumor and CVA with infarction was possible in approximately 97% of the patients, the differential diagnosis of intracranial space-occupying lesion versus CVA with infarction in approximately 95%. There were 14 false positive results recorded (0.8% of the 1722 patients).
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PMID:[Reliability of positive findings in serial cerebral scintigraphy. Evaluation of a prospective series of 1700 cases]. 117 13

Brain scintigrams with 8-10 mci of pertechnetate were studied refering to surgical, histological and other neuroradiological findings in 91 cases with diagnosis or suspect of basal midline lesions. Anterior view of 45 cases was stored in high speed magnetic tape, displayed on CRT of our data processing system and studied of the ratio of average count for regions of interest, 2 cm x 2 cm in size, placed on the areas of lesion, the sagittal sinus and the normal brain hemispheres. In 18 pituitary adenomas, excluding acromegaly and other intrasellar lesions, 89% of cases with surgical indication for optic nerve symptoms were reported as abnormal scintigrams. In 20 craniopharyngiomas, 11 positive cases consisted mainly of solid, recurrent or thick cystic tumors. Five of 6 ectopic pinealomas and all 6 parasellar or medial sphenoidal ridge meningiomas showed positive uptake. Average counts of the regions of interest placed on tumor areas were 169.4% of normal hemispheric areas in 9 pituitary adenomas, 192.5% in 3 solid craniopharyngiomas, 192.3% in 6 meningiomas and 193.3% in ectopic pinealomas. The difference in the average ratio of the lesion count to the normal hemispheric count was statistically significant between cystic craniopharyngioma and adenoma, ectopic pinealoma, meningioma, glioma and solid craniopharyngioma, and between adenoma and acromegaly with p less than 0.005, and between solid craniopharyngioma and acromegaly, and between glioma and acromegaly with p less than 0.025. In the ratio of the lesion count to the sagittal sinus count, on the other hand, the difference of the average ratio was significant with p less than 0.005, only between cystic craniopharyngioma and ectopic pinealoma, and between cystic and solid craniopharyngioma. These facts suggested that the sagittal sinus count was unsuitable to be the standard count of an anterior scintigram to compare with basal midline count. The routine Polaroid scintigram with Tc99m pertechnetate proved their useful clinical diagnostic value for various basal midline lesions, the size of which indicated the surgical procedures. The digital analysis of anterior scintigrams supported the clinical value of the routine brain scintigram in the detection of these lesions. The ratio of the average count of the basal midline lesion to the normal brain area on the anterior scintigram presents more useful clinical information than the ratio of the lesion to the sagittal sinus count. Brain scintigram is found to be very helpful for the differential diagnosis between solid and cystic sellar tumors which is very important for the decision of surgical indications, and is not always possible by any other conventional neuroradiological procedures.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of brain scintigrams for basal midline lesions (author's transl)]. 124 Jun 13

Between April 1983 and April 1991, we studied nine cases of intracranial meningioma with cystic change out of 100 intracranial meningioma patients. The incidence was 9%. The patient's ages ranged from 40 years to 75 years old. There were five men and four women, of them, three had intratumoral cysts, and six had peritumoral cysts. Histologically, 7 cases were diagnosed as meningothelimatous type, one as psammomatous and the other one as angioblastic type. All the tumors with cystic change in this series were greater than two centimeters in diameter. Because the morphology was indistinct, Nauta's type II cystic meningioma was easily misdiagnosed as glioma or metastatic tumors preoperatively. Microsurgery is the best way for complete removal of the cyst wall to prevent recurrence.
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PMID:Cystic intracranial meningioma. 129 39

A population-based case-control study of incident brain tumours in adults in Adelaide, South Australia considered possible associations of exposures to amalgam fillings and diagnostic dental X-rays with subsequent development of glioma and meningioma. The study, conducted in 1987-1990, recorded data from 110 subjects with glioma, 60 with meningioma and 417 controls. Principal findings were unexplained decreased risks for glioma associated with both exposure to amalgam fillings (age- and sex adjusted relative risk = 0.47, 95% confidence interval: 0.25-0.91; P = 0.02) and to diagnostic dental X-rays (adjusted relative risk = 0.42; 95% confidence interval: 0.24-0.76; P = 0.004), and a possible increased risk for meningioma in males exposed to dental X-rays. The choice of the unexposed comparison group is important in determining if an increased risk is associated with panoramic or full-mouth X-rays in glioma.
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PMID:Amalgam fillings, diagnostic dental x-rays and tumours of the brain and meninges. 130 34

Cellular carbohydrate moieties of 65 human dysonotogenetic brain tumors (craniopharyngioma, epidermoid/dermoid, Rathke cleft cyst, germinoma and non-germinomatous germ-cell tumors) and 60 common brain tumors (glioma, meningioma, neurinoma and pituitary adenoma) were investigated histochemically using sections from Ulex europaeus (UEA-1), Dolichos biflorus (DBA), peanut (PNA) and soybean (SBA), and with anti-blood group A and LewisY (LeyY) antibodies. In craniopharyngiomas and epidermoid/dermoids, it was found that PNA and SBA binding sites existed in suprabasal cells of the epithelium, and that antigen of either blood group A or H (demonstrable by UEA-1) existed in more differentiated epithelial cells compared to the results reported in normal human skin epidermis. Rathke cleft cysts were stained with PNA or SBA, and two out of three Rathke cleft cysts also expressed either H or A antigen. In addition, DBA binding sites, as well as LeY antigen, were frequently seen in craniopharyngiomas and Rathke cleft cysts, but they were entirely absent in the epithelium of epidermoid/dermoid. On the other hand, PNA and SBA reactivities was also found in common brain tumors, while blood group A, H and LeY antigens and DBA reactivity were almost absent in these tumors. These findings demonstrate that carbohydrate moieties such as those of blood group antigens reported to be found in human skin epidermis exist in a similar form in craniopharyngioma, epidermoid/dermoid and the Rathke cleft cyst. The identification of blood group A, H and LeY antigens and DBA reactivity in brain tumors seems to be considerably limited and specific.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Distribution of cellular carbohydrate moieties in human dysontogenetic brain tumors, especially in craniopharyngioma and epidermoid/dermoid. 133 21

Phospholipid and fatty acid composition of human brain tumors is presented. The white matter contains a greater amount of phosphatidylinositol and a very low level of lysophosphoglycerides, as compared to the grey matter. Glioma and meningioma tumors contain a greater amount of phosphatidylinositol, sphingomyelin, and lysophosphoglycerides, as compared to normal cortex tissue. A significant rise in oleic, linoleic and arachidonic acid content in tumor tissue was observed. It is suggested, that changes in lipid composition, may play a role in structural and functional membrane perturbations in neoplastic cells.
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PMID:Phospholipids and fatty acids in human brain tumors. 134 90

The demonstration and accurate localization of intracerebral mass lesions are commonly performed with computerized tomography (CT), which often cannot determine the nature of the lesion. As an aid in the differential diagnosis between brain abscess and neoplasm, the authors have evaluated both 99mTc-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (99mTc-HMPAO) leukocyte scintigraphy and the serum C-reactive protein level. Of 23 patients with intracranial mass lesions, 22 individuals showed ring-like contrast enhancement on CT scans; the one exception was a patient treated for a meningioma who had a negative CT scan despite clinical suspicion of intra- or extracranial abscess. The final diagnosis was invariably established by microscopic examination of tissue specimens. In 10 patients the final diagnosis was brain abscess; the other 13 patients harbored a brain neoplasm (glioma in nine, astrocytoma in one, and metastasis in three). The 99mTc-HMPAO leukocyte scintigraphy detected all cases of abscess. There were no false-positive results. An elevated C-reactive protein level (> 13 mg/liter) was found in all but one patient with abscess and in three patients with neoplasm; two of these three patients had dental root infections which could account for the elevation of C-reactive protein. It is concluded that 99mTc-HMPAO leukocyte scintigraphy should be performed when there is a possibility that a brain abscess may exist. Any steroid treatment should be discontinued for 48 hours prior to leukocyte scintigraphy. Also, C-reactive protein determination should be performed and is useful even when steroids are given.
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PMID:99mTc-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime leukocyte scintigraphy and C-reactive protein levels in the differential diagnosis of brain abscesses. 140 15


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