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Neurosurgery case 1. progressive on and off headache. 6 months PTA. Progressive on and off headache. 1 month PTA. 6 months PTA. Difficulty of walking : “dragging her left leg” Sought consult, Dx: Stroke Medications: metoprolol 50 mg BID Simvastatin 10mg OD Citicholine 500mg OD
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progressive on and off headache 6 months PTA
Progressive on and off headache 1 month PTA 6 months PTA Difficulty of walking : “dragging her left leg” Sought consult, Dx: Stroke Medications: metoprolol 50 mg BID Simvastatin 10mg OD Citicholine 500mg OD Referred to a psychiatrist for therapy
Progressive on and off headache 1 month PTA Difficulty of walking : “dragging her left leg” Sought consult, Dx: Stroke Medications: metoprolol 50 mg BID Simvastatin 10mg OD Citicholine 500mg OD Referred to a psychiatrist for therapy 6 months PTA 2 weeks PTA Progressive headache Nausea and vomiting Blurring of vision
Progressive on and off headache 1 month PTA Difficulty of walking : “dragging her left leg” Sought consult, Dx: Stroke Medications: metoprolol 50 mg BID Simvastatin 10mg OD Citicholine 500mg OD Referred to a psychiatrist for therapy 6 months PTA 2 weeks PTA Progressive headache Nausea and vomiting Blurring of vision 1 day PTA Focal seizures (L) foot, progressively involved her leg, thigh and the whole left half of the body lasting about 5 minutes
Past medical history: • Dx to have migraine • Physical exam: • PR 90/min • BP 170/86 • RR 18/min • T 37.0C
Physical Exam • Awake and oriented to 3 spheres • Pupils 6mm bilateral sluggishly reactive to light • Fundoscopy – bilateral haziness of the temporal aspects of the optic disc with areas of retinal hemorrhages • 6th Nerve palsy left • Shallow L nasolabial fold • Tongue midline in protrusion • Able to do FNT, APST • L hemiparesis; grade 3/5 LE weaker than UE; Right: grade 5/5 UE grade 4/5 LE • DTR’s +++ on the left, ++on the right • Babinski on the left with ankle clonus
Know the incidence and location of the major types of primary and secondary brain tumors.
General clinical manifestations of brain tumors • Intracranial tumors • Cause mass effect , dysfunction or destruction of adjacent neural structures, swelling, abnormal electrical activity, or a combination of these • Present in two major ways: focal compression or irritation of the brain and generalized increase in ICP • Supratentorial vs. infratentorial
Supratentorial tumors Focal neurologic deficit (contralateral limb weakness or visual field deficit) Headache Seizure Tumor growth in a brain region results in loss of neurologic function
Infratentorial tumors • Increased ICP • Direct mass effect from tumor bulk or hemorrhage into a tumor or from hydrocephalus • Headache • Nausea and vomiting • Reduction in LOC • Papilledema
Infratentorial tumors • Cerebellar hemisphere or brainstem dysfunction • Ataxia, nystagmus, cranial nerve palsies • Rarely cause seizures
Intracranial Tumors and ICP Two common presentations of intracranial tumors: • Generalized increase in ICP • Focal compression and irritation of the brain
Causes of increased ICP • Direct mass effect • from tumor bulk • Hemorrhage into a tumor • Indirectly • Hydrocephalus • Communicating • Non-communicating
Most common symptoms • Headaches • usually worse in the morning, • Sleep (recumbent and rise in PCO2) • Nausea and vomiting • pressure exerted on the area postrema • Reduction in level of consciousness
Symptoms • Mild or unnoticed • until the tumor has become very large if the tumor growth rate is slow or • the tumor is located near the periphery of the brain. • Early symptoms • very small, with strategic location (ex. Foramen of Monroe)
Most common signs • Papilledema • Bilateral or unilateral 6th nerve palsy • Abnormalities of the ipsilateral 3rd nerve • Vital sign changes (Cushing’s Triad) • Elevation of SBP – late • Bradycardia – late • Abnormal respiratory pattern
Management (Medical) • head elevation at 30-45 degrees & keep midline • hyperventilation: PaCO2 30-40 mmHg • PaO2 > 70mm Hg • systemic arterial pressure maintained bet 100-160 mmHg for cerebral autoregulation to be normal: CPP =/> 90mmHg • normothermia: fever increases CBF
Management (Medical) • sedation & nm blockade for agitated px • anticonvulsants: seizures can inc CBF • fluid resuscitation : plain isotonic saline • cerebral decompressants • mannitol 20% by bolus IV • hypertonic saline solution (7.2%) • diuretics: furosemide 40- 60 mg per IVT • corticosteroids: dexamethasone • barbiturate coma: to lower metabolic rate and dec icp
Management (Surgical) • craniotomy/craniectomy for evacuation of hematoma or mass lession • decompressive crainectomy • ventriculostomy (EVD) for the release of CSF & placement of icp monitoring
Primary Brain tumor • Intra-axial brain tumor • Extra-axial brain tumor
Intra-axial Brain Tumor • Most are derived from glia and are called glioma • Low metastatic potential • Prognosis is poor; ability to infiltrate widely
Intra-axial Brain Tumor • Spread preferentially along white matter tracts and may cross corpus callosum into the contralateral hemisphere • Resistant to both radiation and chemotherapy
Astrocytoma • Most common type of glioma • 50% of all primary brain tumors • Four groups • Grade 1: well-circumscribed tumor with essentially no ability to transform into higher grades • Grade 2: low grade; increased cellularity, infiltrative and lack distinct boundaries • Grade 3: anaplastic; increased cellularity and either endothelial proliferation or mitotic figures • Grade 4: glioblastoma multiforme
Oligodendroglioma • Frequently found in frontal, temporal, or parietal lobes • On CT scan: calcification and hemorrhage • On MRI: similar to those of astrocytoma • Tx: chemotherapy, similar to astrocytomas • Median survival rate: 7 to 10 years
Ependymoma • Frequently diagnosed in younger patients • Typically present as a mass in the 4th ventricle and cause hydrocephalus • Symptoms: headache, nausea and vomiting, papilledema, gait ataxia, vertigo and diplopia • Tx: surgical resection and postoperative radiation therapy • May spread through CSF pathway; tx is craniospinal axis radiation • Median survival rate: 7 to 10 years
Medulloblastoma • 20 – 25% of all pediatric brain tumor • Most common primary brain tumor in children • Derived from undifferentiated precursor to both neurons and astrocytes • Most often found in the cerebellar vermis • Symptoms: hydrocephalus and cerebellar signs • In adults: lateral cerebellar hemisphere and present with dysmetria • Primitive neuroectodermal tumors – outside the posterior fossa
Medulloblastoma • Tx: maximal surgical resection followed by radiation therapy • Median survival time: 7 to 10 years, with complete surgical resection and lack of CSF spread
Hemangioblastoma • Most common posterior faussa tumor in adult, after metastases • Benign tumor composed of capillaries, dilated vessels and foamy stromal cells • Can occur as part of von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease • Present with cerebellar findings: headache, ataxia, vertigo and dysmetria
Hemangioblastoma • Most commonly found in cerebellum, also occur in the brainstem and spinal cord • Radiographically present as a solid enhancing mass or as a systic tumor with and enhancing mural nodule • Tx: Complete surgical removal of the solid component or nodule
Primary CNS Lymphoma • Rare intracranial tumor • Common in elderly patients and immunocompromised patients (AIDS) • Highly sensitive to radiation • Prognosis is poor • Median survival time is 4 years in person without AIDS and 3-6 months in person with AIDS
Germ cells and Pineal Region Tumors • Germ cells tumors • Germinoma • Embryonal carcinoma • Choriocarcinoma • Endodermal sinus tumor • Found in pineal or hypothalamic region of children and young adults • Often release tumor markers in the CSF • Endodermal sinus tumor - -Fetoprotein • Choriocarcinoma --human chorionic gonadotropin • Germinoma – placental alkaline phosphatase
Germ cells and Pineal Region Tumors • Germinoma • Radiosensitive tumor • curable • Other germ cell tumors • Carry poor prognosis • Require both radiation and chemotherapy
Germ cells and Pineal Region Tumors • Pineal gland tumors • originate in the posterior aspect of the 3rd ventricle • may cause hydrocephalus from the occlusion of aqueduct of Sylvius • Parinaud’s syndrome • Paralysis of upward gaze • Pupils that constrict on accommodation but fail to react to light • Nystagmus retractorius
Meningioma • Second most common primary brain tumor: 20% of the total • Arising from arachnoidal cap cells • Benign tumors that originate from the dura and displays the brain as they grow • Do not invade the brain unless they are malignant • Can invade and erode the skull or can cause a hyperostotic reaction
Meningioma • Most common locations • Parasagittal regions • Cerebral convexities • Subfrontal region • Cerebellopontine angle • Found in adults, more common in woman
Meningioma • Diagnosis: CT or MRI is the principal means of diagnosis • Tx: surgery, requires completer removal of the tumor, dural origin and involved skull
Schwannoma • Benign tumors • Arise from schwann cells • Most common type: • Vestibular schwannoma or acoustic neuroma • Originates from the vestibulocochlear • Presents with unilateral hearing loss, tinnitus, dizziness, facial numbness
Schwannoma • Appear isointense to brain on T1 MRI • MRI scan shows an enhancing mass in the cerebellopontine angle that enters the internal auditory canal • Tx: complete surgical resection
Pituitary Adenoma • Arise from the cells in the anterior pituitary gland • Functional or non-functional • Functional tumors • Cause an endocrinopathy from excessive hormone production • Prolactinoma – most common functional tumor • Causes amenorrhea and galactorrhea in women
Pituitary Adenoma • Non-functional Pituitary Adenomas • Presents with mass effect on adjacent structures notably the optic chiasm • Patients experiences a loss of peripheral vision and describes a bitemporal field cut on formal visual field testing
Pituitary Adenoma • Pituitary Microadenoma • Appear as a non-enhancing area even the pituitary gland that are seen best on coronal images • Pituitary Macroadenoma • Erode and enlarge the sella turcica in addition to elevating the optic chiasm • MRI shows a variable degree of enhancement and cannot usually distinguish between tumor and normal pituitary
Pituitary Adenoma • Sublabial or intranasal incision • Transsphenoidal craniotomy • Conventional intracranial surgery is chosen when the tumor is primarily suprasellar tumor • Radiosurgery • Good option for patients with small residual tumor
ROUTINE LABORATORY STUDIES • CBC and Blood tests • detect markers that may indicate pineal or pituitary tumors • Analysis of electrolytes • Glucose • BUN/Creatinine • Calcium and Magnesium • Liver function • Coagulation profile
LAB STUDIES • Lumbar Puncture (Spinal Tap) • needle is placed in the lower back to obtain a small sample of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) • look for cancer cells, blood, or tumor markers • done only after CT or MRI scan • particularly important in people with suspected brain lymphomas • Neurological, vision, and hearing tests • help determine the suspected tumor's effects on the brain's functioning • Eye examination can detect changes to the optic nerve