CASE REPORT An Unexpected Lesion in Cerebellopontine Angle : hemangiopericytoma (original) (raw)
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Intracranial hemangiopericytoma: A case report and review of the literature
2012
Abstract Intracranial hemangiopericytomas (HPCs) are rare central nervous system tumors arising from Zimmermann pericytes or mesenchymal cells. It is often difficult to distinguish these tumors from meningiomas based on clinical features and radiological findings. HPCs have been clinically detected in many of the intracranial compartments; here, we present a case with presumed meningioma that was adjacent to the right lateral ventricle and was confirmed by histopathology analysis.
Hemangiopericytoma in the central nervous system
Neurochirurgie, 2008
Most hemangiopericytomas (HPC) are located in the musculoskeletal system and the skin, while the location in the central nervous system (CNS) is rare. The latter represents 2 to 4% in large series of meningeal tumors, thus accounting for less than 1% of all CNS tumors. In the central nervous system, tumors with a hemangiopericytomatous histolopathological pattern can be either hemangiopericytomas or solitary fibrous tumors. CNS-HPCs have a relentless tendency for local recurrence and metastases outside the CNS. Metastasis can also appear many years after adequate treatment of the primary tumor.
Intracranial Hemangiopericytoma: A Case Report
İstanbul Tıp Fakültesi Dergisi, 2014
Meningeal hemangiopericytoma (HPC) originating from pericytes is a highly vascularised and a rare mesenchimal tumor that constitutes %0.4 of all primary central nervous system tumors. These tumors share common arachnoid location with benign meningioma and mimic meningiomas in clinical and radiographic presentation. Because of the aggressive nature of the central nervous system HPs with high recurrence and distal metastasis rates the first line treatment is total resection with close follow ups postoperatively. In this report we tried to analyse the differentiation of hematoma and recurrence and evaluated the role of radiotherapy in light of the current literature.
Intracranial Hemangiopericytoma: Study of 12 Cases
Acta Neurochirurgica, 2001
Most hemangiopericytomas (HPCs) are located in the musculoskeletal system and the skin, while the intracranial location is rare. They represent 2 to 4% in large series of meningeal tumours, thus accounting for less than 1% of all intracranial tumours. Many authors have argued about the true origin of this tumour. The current World Health Organization classification of Central Nervous System tumours distinguishes HPC as an entity of its own, and classified it into the group of “mesenchymal, non-meningothelial tumours”. Radical surgery is the treatment of choice, but must be completed with postoperative radiotherapy, which has proved to be the therapy most strongly related to the final prognosis. HPCs have a relentless tendency for local recurrence and metastases outside the central nervous system which can appear even many years after diagnosis and adequate treatment of the primary tumour. Twelve patients with intracranial HPC were treated at our Unit between 1978 and 1999. There were 10 women and 2 men. Ten tumours were supratentorial and most located at frontoparietal parasagittal level. The most common manner of presentation was a focal motor deficit. All tumours were hyperdense in the basal Computed Tomography scans and most enhanced homogeneously following intravenous contrast injection. In 50% of cases, tumour margins were irregular or lobulated. Seven tumours were studied with Magnetic Resonance Imaging, being six of them iso-intense with the cortical gray matter on T1-weighted and T2-weighted images. Twenty operations were performed in the 12 patients. In 10 cases radical excision could be achieved with no operative mortality. Total recurrence rate was 33.3%. Eight patients were treated with external radiotherapy at some time through the course of their disease. Eight out of the 12 patients in this series are disease-free (Glasgow Outcome Scale categories 1 and 2) after a mean follow up of 52 months.
Primary Intradural Hemangiopericytoma With Intramedullary Invasion
Journal of the Chinese Medical Association, 2009
Hemangiopericytoma (HPC) is a rare tumor of the central nervous system and is usually found intracranially. Intraspinal HPCs are very rare and mostly involve the extradural bony structures. Primary intradural HPC has only been reported in 10 cases, all of which occurred in the extramedullary region. Intramedullary invasion has never been reported. Here, we describe a case of primary intradural HPC of the thoracic spine that presented initially with paresthesia and paraplegia of both legs. Magnetic resonance imaging of the thoracic spine showed an intradural dumbbell-shaped tumor at the T10 level. The initial impression was neurogenic tumor, meningioma, or metastasis. During operation, the tumor was found to have obvious intramedullary invasion. Gross-total removal was done, and the patient's neurological function improved; there was no recurrence at the 3-year follow-up. There is no consensus as to what constitutes the optimal treatment of HPC, but most neurosurgeons will advocate gross-total resection. A comparative analysis between intradural and extradural HPCs showed a higher chance of gross-total resection for intradural HPCs, while the recurrence rates showed no difference. The role of adjuvant radiotherapy remains uncertain. Due to the high risk of recurrence and metastasis of HPCs, close follow-up for a long period is mandatory. [
Meningeal Hemangiopericytoma: A Rare Intracranial Tumor—About a Case
Case Reports in Clinical Medicine, 2022
Introduction: Hemangiopericytoma is a very rare vascular tumor, difficult to diagnose, often confused with a meningioma. Imaging is not very specific and the diagnostic certainty remains histological. Observation: We report a case of meningeal hemangiopericytoma in a 48-year-old patient with a history of active smoking and whose sister died of glioblastoma. He was brought to the emergency room for a fall, confusion, and tonic-clonic seizures. The diagnosis was suspected on imaging (CT and MRI, in front of a syndrome of right temporal intraventricular mass measured at 37 mm in diameter, centered on the choroid plexus, with perilesional vasogenic edema and posterior white commissure. There was homogeneous enhancement of the lesion after gadolinium injection. The diagnosis was confirmed by immunohistochemical study, which showed diffuse expression of STAT6 and partial labeling for CD34, without significant expression of SSTR2. Expression of neurofilament protein was also found in the brain parenchyma. Conclusion: Hemangiopericytoma is a rare tumor, characterized by its malignant potential, its high rate of recurrence and distant metastasis. The management is based on a total microsurgical resection followed by radiotherapy.