Background: Chemical meningitis, a subtype of aseptic meningitis, as a complication of posterior fossa surgery is not a rare complication. However, the description of a severe protracted course following the surgical resection of an epidermoid cyst has not been described in the current literature. Chemical meningitis is thought to be associated with a hyperreactive inflammatory response, mediated in part by interleukin (IL)-10, IL-1β, and tumor necrosis factor-α, to the postoperative keratin debris from the spontaneous leakage or surgical release of epidermoid contents into subarachnoid spaces, which ultimately can result in patient symptoms of meningitis and hydrocephalus. Often, this remains mild and the recommended management includes a short course administration of corticosteroids. Case Description: The authors report such a case in a patient who underwent a redoresection for a fourth ventricular epidermoid cyst. Postoperatively, the patient returned several times with symptoms of meningitis and hydrocephalus requiring multiple hospitalizations in the ensuing months. The patient required emergent cerebrospinal fluid diversion, further posterior fossa exploration and an extended high-dose corticosteroid treatment regimen. Conclusion: The authors summarize the current understanding of the biochemical processes involved for the rare presentation of postoperative chemical meningitis.
Background: Liponeurocytomas are rare neurocytic neoplasms that most often arise in the posterior fossa and affect individuals in the third and fifth decades of life. Most reported cases of this unique tumor in the literature have described a favorable clinical prognosis without recurrence. However, increasing reports of recurrent cases prompted the World Health Organization, in 2016, to recategorize the tumor from Grade I to the less favorable Grade II classification. We conducted a systematic review to identify recurrent cases of this unique tumor and to summarize differences between the primary and recurrent cases of liponeurocytoma. Methods: A systematic review exploring recurrent liponeurocytoma cases was conducted by searching the PubMed, Google Scholar, and Scopus databases for articles in English. Abstracts from articles were read and selected for full-text review according to a priori criteria. Relevant full-text articles were analyzed for symptoms, imaging, location, histological, pathological, treatment, and recurrence-free time between the primary and recurrent cases. Results: Of 4392 articles, 15 articles accounting for 18 patients were included (level of evidence: IV) in the study. Recurrence-free time decreased from an average of 82 months between the primary tumor resection to first recurrence to 31.3 months between the first and second recurrence. Recurrent tumors demonstrated increased pleomorphic neural cells, necrosis, vascular proliferation, and MIB-1 index when compared to the primary tumor. Several cases also demonstrated decreased lipidizing components when compared to the primary tumor, further indicating increased dedifferentiation. The primary treatment for this tumor was surgical resection with occasional adjunctive radiotherapy. Conclusion: Recurrent cases of liponeurocytoma have features of increased malignant proliferation compared to the primary cases. The standard treatment for these primary and recurrent tumors is gross total resection. The role of adjunctive radiotherapy remains a matter of debate.
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