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Query: UMLS:C0079731 (
B-cell lymphoma
)
16,671
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 27-year-old woman had a solitary primary
B-cell lymphoma
that involved the right cerebellopontine angle. The tumor invaded the ipsilateral acoustic nerve and produced profound sensory neural hearing loss. Surgical resection was promptly followed by radiotherapy and a concluding brief chemotherapy treatment. The patient survived 34 months after the initial onset of the disease or 22 months after the combined treatments. Only six lymphomas affecting the cerebellopontine angle, three primary and three secondary, have been recorded. The combination of surgical treatment and radiotherapy appeared to offer encouraging results for primary lymphomas. The differential diagnosis of lymphoma of the cerebellopontine angle includes common acoustic neurilemoma,
meningioma
, epidermoid tumor, and other rare neoplasms involving this region that required pathological verification to distinguish them.
...
PMID:Solitary primary lymphoma of the cerebellopontine angle: case report. 775 62
The clinicopathologic findings in five patients with primary low-grade
B-cell lymphoma
of the intracranial dura are described. All patients were women, 40-62 years of age, who presented with focal neurologic symptoms. Radiologic studies showed a well-localized dural mass in each case, raising a preoperative diagnosis of
meningioma
. Cytologically these were composed of a diffuse infiltrate of small lymphocytes with plasmacytoid differentiation, with a variable admixture of centrocytelike cells. Lambda light chain restriction was found in three cases, and kappa light chain in one. VJ polymerase chain reaction for immunoglobulin heavy-chain rearrangement was positive in three of four cases, including one case in which immunostaining results were equivocal. Staging procedures did not show involvement at any other site. Therapy consisted of radiation (n = 3), chemotherapy (n = 1), or both (n = 1), with excellent response. There was no evidence of recurrence or subsequent dissemination at follow-up of up to 63 months. Low-grade B-cell lymphomas arising in the intracranial dura are rare but appear to be similar to other low-grade B-cell lymphomas arising in extranodal sites in terms of clinical presentation as stage 1E disease, indolent behavior, and favorable response to treatment, suggesting that they may be part of the mucosa associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma spectrum. They appear to arise at dural sites where meningothelial cells are concentrated.
...
PMID:Primary low-grade B-cell lymphoma of the dura: a mucosa associated lymphoid tissue-type lymphoma. 899 Jan 44
We report 2 cases of low-grade
B-cell lymphoma
of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) type presenting as primary lesions in the intracranial dura. Both patients are female, and, prior to biopsy were felt to have subdural hematoma and
meningioma
based on preoperative MRI scans. Histologically, both cases showed a diffuse proliferation of small centrocyte-like cells or monocytoid B cells admixed with a moderate number of large transformed cells. Reactive germinal center formation was present, as was plasmacytoid differentiation in one case. These histologic features are identical to those associated with low-grade MALT lymphomas arising at other more typical sites. Clinically, both patients were found to have stage IE disease at diagnosis without evidence of lymphoma outside of the central nervous system. Immunophenotypically, the lymphomas expressed B-cell-associated antigens CD20 and CD79a without coexpression of CD5, CD10, or CD23, and 1 of the 2 cases tested showed monoclonal rearrangement of the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene without rearrangement of bcl-1 or bcl-2. MALT lymphomas have recently been described in the dura and are postulated to arise in association with meningoepithelial cells. It is important that this entity be recognized and distinguished from other small B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas such as mantle cell lymphoma, small lymphocytic lymphoma, or follicular small cleaved cell lymphomas, since localized low grade MALT lymphomas are usually clinically indolent proliferations which may require only minimally aggressive therapy.
...
PMID:Primary low-grade B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) arising in dura. 983 58
Future improvements in the diagnosis and treatment of human gliomas might rely on obtaining more specific information concerning the biologic characteristics of individual tumor cells. Telomerase, a ribonucleoprotein that synthesizes telomeres, has been reported to be expressed in a majority of human tumors, including several subtypes of brain tumor. We hypothesized that a quantitative assay for telomerase activity, combined with selective microdissection of tumor or normal brain cells, might reveal telomerase gain-of-function to be important in the pathogenesis of gliomas and that telomerase levels might have prognostic significance. We used tissue microdissection for selective analysis of tumor cells obtained from eight patients with glioma, one with a
meningioma
, and one with a primary
B-cell lymphoma
of the central nervous system. Normal brain tissue microdissected from another patient was used as a control. Telomerase activity was screened by an electrophoretic method and then assayed by a quantitative ELISA method. All of the eight gliomas had positive telomerase activity, as did the lymphoma. The
meningioma
and normal brain were negative. Quantitative analysis of telomerase activity did not correlate with tumor grade nor predict outcome. Selective tissue microdissection, combined with qualitative and quantitative telomerase assays, permits rapid and reliable detection of telomerase activity in diverse brain tumor tissues. These preliminary findings suggest that telomerase reactivation is a frequent event in glioma tumorigenesis that can be sensitively and specifically detected in gliomas of all histologic grades. Furthermore, specific detection of telomerase reactivation represents another mechanism by which tumor formation and progression might become the target of novel therapeutics.
...
PMID:Telomerase activity in microdissected human gliomas. 995 Jan 61
Mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphomas are low-grade B-cell neoplasms that occur in a variety of extranodal sites. Only rarely has this entity been discovered as a primary tumor involving the dura of the cavernous sinus. We report the case of a 46 year old woman who presented with a mass involving the cavernous sinus that was originally diagnosed as a
meningioma
by MRI. However, at surgery the mass was found to be an extranodal marginal zone
B-cell lymphoma
of the MALT type. The patient underwent partial excision of the lesion followed by radiation. There are only seven other cases of marginal zone
B-cell lymphoma
involving the intracranial dura reported in the literature. These patients were females who presented with intracranial lesions thought to be consistent with
meningioma
by preoperative radiographic imaging. MALT lymphomas of the dura, as their counterparts in other organs, appear to have favorable clinical outcomes and excellent long-term prognoses with local therapy alone.
...
PMID:Extranodal marginal zone B-cell lymphoma of malt type involving the cavernous sinus. 1169 33
Primary lymphoma arising in dura is exceedingly rare. We report the clinicopathologic findings of two patients with primary
B-cell lymphoma
of dura. Both were female, 38 and 45 years old. Prior to biopsy they were felt to have
meningioma
on preoperative magnetic resonance imagery. Histologically, tumors were classified as MALT-type lymphoma. Literature describe only 14 reports of similar entity. Primary lymphomas arising in dura appear to have a more favourable clinical course compared to PCNSL and may require a less aggressive treatment.
...
PMID:[Primary dural lymphoma: a report of two cases with review of the literature]. 1291 73
Meningeal and intracerebral plasma cell granulomas are uncommon inflammatory lesions of unknown etiology. In this paper the diagnostic difficulties in two patients with meningeal plasma cell granuloma and one patient with intracerebral plasma cell granuloma are described. The first patient had an intracranial extra-axial lesion, which was first diagnosed as a
meningioma
. One and a half years later she underwent a second resection for recurrent tumor growth and the diagnosis of a meningeal plasma cell granuloma was made. The second patient was treated for a central nervous system
B-cell lymphoma
but proved to have an intracerebral plasma cell granuloma in retrospect 11 years later. In the third patient tuberculous meningitis was considered to be the most likely diagnosis because infratentorial contrast-enhanced thickened meninges (pachymeningitis) were found together with a high protein level in the cerebrospinal fluid and a positive Mantoux test. However, pathological examination of an extra-axial, cervical lesion that was operated upon revealed a meningeal plasma cell granuloma. These cases show the importance of diagnosing a meningeal or intracerebral plasma cell granuloma correctly, since it has both therapeutical and prognostic implications.
...
PMID:The diagnostic difficulties of meningeal and intracerebral plasma cell granulomas--presentation of three cases. 1464 45
A 47-year-old Hispanic male presented with visual field disturbances, memory impairment, and a seizure. CT and MRI were consistent with
meningioma
. Both neurologic exam and routine laboratory tests were within normal limits. The patient underwent craniotomy and subtotal resection of the tumor. On H&E, the lesion was composed of a lymphoid mass with well-defined irregularly shaped follicles surrounded by a monomorphic population of small lymphocytes. Marginal zones stained for B-cell markers, CD20 and CD79a, one T-cell marker, CD43, and kappa light chains. While other markers did not stain the majority of tumor cells, they did identify other lymphoid and plasma cell elements. A diagnosis of marginal zone
B-cell lymphoma
of dura, mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT)-type (extranodal) was made. MALT-type lymphomas are unusual in the nervous system; this is the first such case reported in a male and serves to emphasize the wide diversity of presentation of a neoplasm originally described in the GI tract and thus far described in the CNS only in females.
...
PMID:Primary dural mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue-type lymphoma: case report and review of the literature. 1517 17
The authors report a rare
meningioma
-primary cerebral
B cell lymphoma
association that occurred in an insulin-dependent type-I diabetic woman. The woman was initially operated on because of meningothelial
meningioma
of the fronto-basal region, and 2 months later showed a primitive-non-Hodgkin
B cell lymphoma
, localized in the same area as the
meningioma
. The published literature on the
meningioma
-primary cerebral lymphoma association is revised.
...
PMID:Meningioma-primary brain lymphoma association. 1564 95
Primary presentation of an intradural Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is rare. Recently these B cell lymphomas of mucosa associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) have gained acceptance as an important pathological subtype and are distinguishable from other primary CNS lymphomas that exhibit aggressive behaviour. Over the past decade a number of these lesions have been reported to resemble a
meningioma
both intra-operatively and radiologically. The authors outline such a case of marginal zone
B cell lymphoma
that clinically and radiologically resembled a
meningioma
. This case illustrates the rare occurrence of low grade dural
B cell lymphoma
and the need to consider this entity in the differential diagnosis of CNS lesions, if appropriate targeted therapy is to be administered.
...
PMID:Intracranial non-Hodgkin's MALT lymphoma mimicking a large convexity meningioma. 1657 Jan 14
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