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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Astroblastoma is a rare glial neoplasm whose histogenesis has been clarified recently. It primarily occurs in children and young adults. We are reporting a case of 12-year-old girl child who presented with features of raised intracranial tension and generalized tonic-clonic seizures. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed a large well-circumscribed, cystic lesion without perifocal edema, and enhancing mural nodule in right parietal region. A radiological differential diagnosis of pilocytic astrocytoma and cerebral astroblastoma was made. A complete excision was done and histologically the lesion turned out to be an astroblastoma. We review the histology, immunohistochemistry, and imaging features of astroblastoma and survey the current literature, treatment strategies, and prognostic aspects for the management of this rare neoplasm.
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PMID:Cerebral astroblastoma: A radiopathological diagnosis. 2489 4

Astroblastoma is a rare, mostly supratentorial glial tumor, occurring predominantly in children and young adults with female preponderance. Due to the rarity, with only about 230 reported cases, treatment strategies are still to be discussed. We describe two more cases to add to the clinical experiences with this tumor entity. In both of these cases, the clinical behavior did not follow the expectations based on histopathological classification. Case 1: A sixteen-year old female presented with a six month history of intermittent headaches, nausea and dizziness. MRI scans revealed a left parietooccipital mass lesion with bubbly contrast enhancement and marked peritumoral edema. After gross total tumor resection the histology gave the diagnosis of low grade astroblastoma. Fifteen months later, the patient was operated on a local recurrence and received postoperative radiotherapy, with the histology still being that of low grade astroblastoma. Two years later, a meningeally based tumor nodule frontal of the former tumor bed was removed, now diagnosed as high grade astroblastoma. Eighteen months later, a fourth operation with excision of two more meningeally based tumor nodules of high-grade astroblastoma followed. Chemotherapy was suggested, but the patient decided against it. The last MRI follow-up 14 months after last operation showed no further recurrence so far. Case 2: A 24-year old female presented with a four week history of vomiting and headaches with focal seizures affecting her left arm. CT and MRI scans revealed a superficial partly cystic right temporal mass lesion with few edema and macrocalcifications and adjacent bone atrophy. Despite dural invasion, total tumor resection could be performed. MRI scans six months later showed no recurrence. The patient refused further MRI controls but did not show any clinical signs or symptoms suggesting tumor recurrence four years after the operation. In order to find more predictive tools that might help to determine the individual clinical course and treatment, we performed a review of the literature, analyzing 29 cases with detailed data on clinical history, MRI/CT characteristics, histopathological subtyping, treatment details and a follow-up of at least 12 months. We found, that low-grade astroblastoma with marked peritumoral edema has a tendency to early recurrence and suggest that it should be treated by combined surgery and radiotherapy. In high-grade astroblastoma with well defined tumor borders and few peritumoral edema, the prognosis may be better than expected for a high-grade glioma, if GTR is possible.
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PMID:Astroblastoma: report of two cases with unexpected clinical behavior and review of the literature. 2510 99

Astroblastoma is a rare brain tumor occurring in children and adults, rarely in the elderly. It constitutes up to 3% of all brain tumors. We report a case of a 14-year-old girl who presented with recurrent seizures and minimal right hemiparesis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a left fronto-parietal brain tumor. It was managed with subtotal resection in a local hospital. Subsequently, she was referred to Princess Nora Oncology Center for further characterization and management. Pathology slide revision revealed well-differentiated astroblastoma. Upon follow up, the patient had multiple recurrences of the same tumor and emergence of a new lesion at the area of Sylvian fissure. Excision of the emerging tumor revealed anaplastic astroblastoma. Astroblastoma is a glial tumor that predominantly affects females. Its clinical progression is unpredictable, with high recurrence rate. Surgical intervention is considered the mainstay of treatment, while radiotherapy and chemotherapy effectiveness is debatable. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of well-differentiated and anaplastic astroblastoma as two separate neoplastic lesions in the same patient with its clinical, radiological, and pathological features.
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PMID:Well-differentiated and anaplastic astroblastoma in the same patient: a case report and review of the literature. 2622 56

Astroblastoma is a rare tumor of the central nervous system (CNS) with uncertain clinical behavior. Recently, DNA methylation profiling has been shown to provide a highly robust and reproducible approach for the classification of all CNS tumors across different age groups. By using DNA methylation profiling, a subset of CNS high-grade tumors with astroblastoma-like morphology characterized by the meningioma 1 gene (MN1) rearrangements, has been identified; they were termed "CNS high-grade neuroepithelial tumors with MN1 alteration" (CNS-HGNET-MN1). Here, we describe a case of CNS-HGNET-MN1 diagnosed by DNA methylation profiling, using Illumina Infinium HumanMethylationEPIC BeadChip (EPIC), that offers the opportunity to conduct a brief literature review. The patient presented with an episode of partial seizures involving the right hemisoma. A gross total resection was performed. No other treatment was proposed in light of the histological and molecular findings. After 21 months, the patient is disease-free in good clinical conditions. Also in view of this case, we recommend DNA-methylation profiling as an important tool for diagnosis and more effective patient stratification and management.
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PMID:Role of DNA Methylation Profile in Diagnosing Astroblastoma: A Case Report and Literature Review. 3111 8