Eosinophilic granuloma is an uncommon lesion, often self-limiting. A location in the spine is rare; until now, only 35 cases have been reported. MRI is the most effective diagnostic technique, although conventional X-ray can also be useful as a first approach. Therapy consists of immobilization of the patients, surgery and chemotherapy as required by to the clinical findings of the lesion. The role of radiotherapy is still controversial. The authors describe the fourth case of eosinophilic granuloma of the cervical spine with neurological symptoms reported in literature.
This retrospective study focuses on 14 patients with ganglioglioma of the cerebral hemispheres who received surgical treatment in the Neurosciences Department/Neurosurgery of "La Sapienza" University of Rome between 1953 and 1990. The data are analyzed together with those on 98 published cases of ganglioglioma confined to the cerebral hemispheres. These tumours have no sex preference but a decided preference for the young (mean age 18 years). They are characterized by a history of epilepsy often of long standing and sometimes refractory to drugs. The most frequent site is the temporal lobe (61%). At operation the tumour proved to be solid in 52% of cases and the satellite cyst at the tumour wall in 48%. Removal was total in 65% of cases. Even after subtotal removal, the prognosis is good in terms both of survival and of seizure control. Radiotherapy seems to have no role in the treatment of these tumours.
Cavernous angiomas represent 5 to 12% of spinal vascular malformations and usually are located at the vertebral body level with possible extension into the extradural space. The intradural intramedullary cavernoma occurs in about 3% of cases, whereas extramedullary localization is extremely rare. A new case of an intradural extramedullary cavernous angioma is reported, and the clinical, diagnostic, and therapeutic aspects of this rare malformation are analyzed.
This report presents a very rare case of metastatic meningioma of the parotid gland from a recurring intracranial lesion. The primary tumor, intracranial residues, and parotid metastasis were histologically benign. Meningiomas rarely metastasize; even rarer are cases in which both the primary and the secondary tumors have benign histological characteristics. The 11 cases reported in the literature have been critically reviewed. The case we present is noteworthy also for the exceptional localization of the metastasis in the parotid gland.
We report a retrospective study conducted on 40 patients with neurinoma of the cauda equina, assessing the clinical features and treatment. Neurinomas are clinically indistinguishable from other tumours localized in the same region. It is possible, but not simple, to differentiate neurinoma of the cauda equina from more common lumbar disc herniations. In the early stage, neurinomas provoke sciatic pain that is unilateral and monoradicular, worsened in decubitus and hard to define, whereas in the later stage pain becomes bilateral, polyradicular and is mostly accompanied by motor and sensory disturbances. Moreover, Lasegue's sign was often absent. Therapeutically, total removal of the tumour seems to be the most appropriate form of treatment given that even the sacrifice of a root does not worsen any pre-existing neurological deficit.
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