Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (ophthalmoplegia)
3,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a rare skull base neurocytoma. A 44-year-old female with a history of focal seizure and progressive right-sided weakness sought treatment at an outside institution, where she underwent total resection of a "left medial sphenoid wing paraganglioma" in 1984. In 1995 after experiencing intense left-sided headaches for 3 weeks, the patient presented to our institution. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a large local recurrence. She had deficits dating to her initial surgery, including moderate right-sided hemiparesis, complete left ophthalmoplegia, and left facial numbness.The patient underwent a craniotomy with extensive removal of the involved sphenoid bone and a subtotal resection of the tumor. Neurocytoma was diagnosed based on strong immunohistochemical staining for synaptophysin and no reactivity for glial fibrillary acidic protein. Postoperatively, her headaches resolved completely and her neurologic status remained at baseline. The residual tumor was treated with radiation therapy. After 5 years, she remains clinically and radiographically stable.Although typically located adjacent to the foramen of Monro, neurocytomas have now been reported in almost every subcompartment of the craniospinal axis. Finding neurocytomas in extraventricular locations may require revisiting the current theory that subependymal progenitor cells are the cells of origin for these tumors.
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PMID:Skull base neurocytoma: case report and review of the literature of extraventricular neurocytomas. 1716 46

A 39-year-old male without contributory medical history had sustained progressive double vision, ptosis, and trigeminal pain for 2 weeks. Physical examination revealed total ophthalmoplegia and visual field defect with normal blood examination and chest radiography. Cranial computed tomography revealed a hyperdense mass in the left frontotemporal fossae with bony erosion. Magnetic resonance imaging confirmed a broad-based, intensely enhanced extraaxial tumor of 4x4x4 cm diameter with dural tail sign. Cerebral angiography demonstrated insignificant blood supply both from the internal carotid and middle meningeal arteries. Nearly total tumor resection was achieved via orbitofrontotemporal craniotomy. Intraoperative findings revealed the extraaxial tumor with broad attachment to the dura mater and invasion to the optic and oculomotor nerves. Histological examination revealed hypercellular tumor with significant cell atypism, mitotic activity, and focal necrosis. Immunohistochemical staining was positive for AE1/3 and c-kit, but negative for glial fibrillary acidic protein. Systemic examination performed postoperatively revealed a thymic tumor without additional remote lesions. The final diagnosis was metastatic brain tumor from thymic carcinoma. Rapid progression of neurological impairment inconsistent with a benign extraaxial tumor needs prompt surgical intervention.
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PMID:Metastatic skull base tumor from thymic carcinoma mimicking Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 2058 79