Secretory meningiomas: a benign subgroup causing life-threatening complications.

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Secretory meningiomas: a benign subgroup causing life-threatening complications. / Regelsberger, Jan; Hagel, Christian; Emami, Pedram; Ries, Thorsten; Heese, Oliver; Westphal, Manfred.

In: NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2008.

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@article{1fbe2048bb9a4efeb8bc4ec148856fdd,
title = "Secretory meningiomas: a benign subgroup causing life-threatening complications.",
abstract = "While meningiomas are known as slow growing extracerebral neoplasm the subgroup of secretory meningioma with histological benign caracteristics tends to cause disproportional peritumoral edema frequently leading to severe medical and neurological complications in the postoperative management. Among 1484 meningiomas which were operated in our institution between 1990 and 2007, 44 (3%) patients were found to have the histological diagnosis of a secretory meningioma. The clinical course, radiological appearance and histopathological features were retrospectively analyzed to point out the specifics of these benign lesions. Meningiomas were located at the convexity (n = 14), the cranial base (18) and the sphenoid ridge (12). Disproportional to the tumor size a severe, nearly hemispheric perifocal edema was seen on preoperative MR-imaging in 18 (41%) patients. Following surgical resection the postoperative course was uneventful in 29 patients. In 15 patients severe peritumoral edema continued or even increased on postoperative CT-imaging. Six patients showed midline shift and clinical worsening necessitating respirator assisted ventilation and intracranial pressure monitoring. An association between the extent of brain edema and number of PAS positive pseudopasmmomas was found (p",
author = "Jan Regelsberger and Christian Hagel and Pedram Emami and Thorsten Ries and Oliver Heese and Manfred Westphal",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
journal = "NEURO-ONCOLOGY",
issn = "1522-8517",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Secretory meningiomas: a benign subgroup causing life-threatening complications.

AU - Regelsberger, Jan

AU - Hagel, Christian

AU - Emami, Pedram

AU - Ries, Thorsten

AU - Heese, Oliver

AU - Westphal, Manfred

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - While meningiomas are known as slow growing extracerebral neoplasm the subgroup of secretory meningioma with histological benign caracteristics tends to cause disproportional peritumoral edema frequently leading to severe medical and neurological complications in the postoperative management. Among 1484 meningiomas which were operated in our institution between 1990 and 2007, 44 (3%) patients were found to have the histological diagnosis of a secretory meningioma. The clinical course, radiological appearance and histopathological features were retrospectively analyzed to point out the specifics of these benign lesions. Meningiomas were located at the convexity (n = 14), the cranial base (18) and the sphenoid ridge (12). Disproportional to the tumor size a severe, nearly hemispheric perifocal edema was seen on preoperative MR-imaging in 18 (41%) patients. Following surgical resection the postoperative course was uneventful in 29 patients. In 15 patients severe peritumoral edema continued or even increased on postoperative CT-imaging. Six patients showed midline shift and clinical worsening necessitating respirator assisted ventilation and intracranial pressure monitoring. An association between the extent of brain edema and number of PAS positive pseudopasmmomas was found (p

AB - While meningiomas are known as slow growing extracerebral neoplasm the subgroup of secretory meningioma with histological benign caracteristics tends to cause disproportional peritumoral edema frequently leading to severe medical and neurological complications in the postoperative management. Among 1484 meningiomas which were operated in our institution between 1990 and 2007, 44 (3%) patients were found to have the histological diagnosis of a secretory meningioma. The clinical course, radiological appearance and histopathological features were retrospectively analyzed to point out the specifics of these benign lesions. Meningiomas were located at the convexity (n = 14), the cranial base (18) and the sphenoid ridge (12). Disproportional to the tumor size a severe, nearly hemispheric perifocal edema was seen on preoperative MR-imaging in 18 (41%) patients. Following surgical resection the postoperative course was uneventful in 29 patients. In 15 patients severe peritumoral edema continued or even increased on postoperative CT-imaging. Six patients showed midline shift and clinical worsening necessitating respirator assisted ventilation and intracranial pressure monitoring. An association between the extent of brain edema and number of PAS positive pseudopasmmomas was found (p

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

JO - NEURO-ONCOLOGY

JF - NEURO-ONCOLOGY

SN - 1522-8517

ER -