Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Pathology- Neurology
CNS Malformations and Tumors (T Pierce)
39
Medical
Professional
03/07/2010

Additional Medical Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
anencephaly (pathogenesis)
Definition
  1. rostral end of neural tube fails to close
  2. leads to absent cranial vault, brain
Term
myelomeningocele (etiology, pathogenesis)
Definition
  • etiology
    • folate deficiency
  • pathogenesis
    1. defective closure of caudal end of neural tube
    2. leads to malformed spinal cord and meninges protroduing through bony defect in spinal column and overlying skin
Term
Arnold-Chiari malformation (Chiari II malformation)- pathogenesis, associated with what disorders
Definition
  1. deficient posterior fossa volume in developing skull
  2. herniation of cerebellar vermis through foramen magnum into cervical spinal canal
  3. leads to downward displacement and malformation of brainstem
  4. leads to kinks in neural axis above and below posterior fossa
    • medulla overrides cervical spinal cord
    • roof of midbrain protrude back as beak like deformity

Associated with lumbosacral meningomyelocele and hydrocephalus

 

Term
Dandy Walker malformation (pathogenesis)
Definition
  1. arrested hindbrain development
  2. lead to
    • absent or hypoplastic cerebellar vermis
    • cystic dilation of fourth ventricle
    • enlarged posterior fossa
    • hydrocephalus
Term
Tumor of primitive CNS precursor cells
Definition
medulloblastoma
Term
glial tumors
Definition
  • astrocytomas
    • circumscribed astrocytomas
    • diffuse infiltrating astrocytomas
  • ependymoma
  • oligodendroglioma
Term
tumors of neuron origin
Definition
ganglion cell tumors
Term
tumors of meninges origin
Definition
meningioma (arachnoid cap cell of leptomeninges)
Term
tumors of CN Schwann cell origin
Definition
schwannoma
Term
Tumors of uncertain histogenesis
Definition

craniopharyngioma

hemangioblastoma

Term
tumor of misplaced germ cell origin
Definition
germ cell tumors
Term
tumor of adenohypophysis origin
Definition
pituitary adenoma
Term
common histological types of tumors in children. Most common precursor cells and most common location
Definition
  • medulloblastoma (in cerebellar vermis, IV ventricle)
  • astrocytoma
    • diffuse astrocytoma
      • brainstem
      • astrocytoma (grade II)
      • glioblastoma multiforme (grade IV)
    • circumscribed astrocytoma
      • pilocytic astrocytoma (grade I) in cerebellar hemispheres
  • ependymoma (in IV ventricle)

Most derived from primitive CNS precursor cells or glia. Most are located in tentorium cerebelli

Term
adult tumors: most common location, most commmon histologic types
Definition
  • most common location- supratentorial
  • most common histologic types
    • high grade astrocytoma
      • glioblastoma multiforme (grade IV)
      • anaplastic astrocytoma (grade III)
    • metastatic
    • meningioma
    • pituitary adenoma
    • Schwannoma
Term
Best correlation with morbidity/mortality of CNS tumors
Definition
  • surgical resectability
    • determine by
      • degree of circumsription
      • location
Term
Describe the ability of primary CNS tumors to metastasize
Definition
  • rarely metastasize beyond CNS
    • CNS does not have lymphatic drainage
Term
Describe how CNS tumors are able to cause a majority of their symptoms
Definition
  • this is a space occupying lesion in a fixed intracranial volume
    • infiltrative, expand/displace normal CNS tissue
    • high grade tumors lack normal CNS BBB
      • cerebral edema around tumor increases mass effect
    • no room to accomadate enlarging tumor
    • increased intracranial pressure, brain herniations
Term
Different types of brain herniations
Definition
  • subfalcine (cingulate)
  • transtentorial (uncal, hippocampal)
  • tonsillar (cerebellar)
Term
subfalcine/cingulate herniation: pathogenesis
Definition
  1. expanding frontal parietal mass
  2. push cingulate gyrus under falx cerebri
  3. compress branches of ACA with infarction of ACA distribution (medial surface of brain)
    • deficits in leg-foot motor sensory area
Term
transtentorial (uncal, hippocampal) herniation: pathogenesis
Definition
  1. medial most part of temporal lobe (uncus) pushed out over edge of tentorium and wedged into cleft between tentorium and cerebral peduncle of midbrain
    • compress CN III- ipsilateral fixed dilated pupil
    • may push midbrain against contralateral tentorium- ipsilateral hemiparesis from peduncular compression 
    • compress PCA with infarction of PCA distribution (supply occipital cortex)
      • contralateral homonymous hemianopsia with macular sparing
Term
tonsillar (cerebellar) herniation- pathogenesis, common etiology and how to avoid
Definition
  • pathogenesis
    1. inferior most part of cerebellar hemispheres pushed into foramen magnum
    2. compress respiratory centers of medulla
  • etiology- tonsillar herniation may result from spinal tap in patient with increase intracranial P
    • check for papilledema
    • obtain CT/MRI before tapping patient with suspected increase in intracranial P
Term
Name the neuroepithelial tumors
Definition
  • gliomas
    • astrocytomas
      • circumscribed
      • diffuse
    • ependymoma
    • oligodendroglioma
  • embryonal tumors- medulloblastoma
Term
Name the tumors of meninges, CN's, and spinal nerves
Definition
  • tumors of meninges- meningioma
  • tumors of CN's and spinal nerves
    • schwannoma
    • neurofibroma
Term
pilocytic astrocytoma (epidemiology, common location, gross and microscopic appearance, prognosis)
Definition
  • epidemiology- children, adolescents
  • common locations
    • cerebellum
    • diencephalon- hypothalamus, optic N./chiasm
  • gross appearance
    • NOT diffursely infiltrative of surrounding brain
    • often cystic with tumor nidus in cyst wall ("mural nodule")
  • microscopic appearance
    • biphasic pattern
      • fascicles of elongated spindle cells with coarse cytoplasmic processes (piloid cells)
      • loose microcystic zones
  • prognosis- use grade I-IV system
    • amenable to surgical excision, long term survival/cure
Term
grading of diffuse astrocytomas
Definition
  • astrocytoma (grade II)
  • anaplastic astrocytoma (grade III)
  • glioblastoma multiforme (grade IV)
Term
common gross features, prognosis of diffuse astrocytomas
Definition
  • gross appearance
    • poor demarcation from surrounding brain with deep extension into neighboring tissue
  • prognosis
    • complete surgical resection often/usually not possible
    • progression of grade II to gade III/IV over time
Term
astrocytoma: clinical presentations, appearance on CT/MRI, gross and microscopic pathology, prognosis
Definition
  • two types of clinical presentations
    • brainstem of children
    • cerebral hemisphere white matter in adults < 40 yrs old
  • CT/MRI- hypodense lesion without contrast enhancement with minimal/absent edema
  • gross pathology
    • no hemorrhage or necrosis
    • gray white poorly demarcated mass expanding or effacing normal architecture
  • microscopic pathology
    • hypercellularlity (increased astrocytoma) with nuclear pleomorphism
    • no mitoses, vascular proliferation, necrosis
  • prognosis
    • survival of several years after surgery (typically 5-10 yrs)
    • late recurrences often at highe grade
    • eventually death from tumor
Term
anaplastic astrocytoma (clinical presentation, CT/MRI, gross and microscopic pathology, prognosis)
Definition
  • clinical presentation- cerebral hemispheric white matter in adult 40-50
  • CT/MRI- low density lesion with irregular contrast enhancement w/ or w/o edema
  • gross pathology- SAME AS ASTROCYTOMA
  • microscopic pathology
    • hypercellularity
    • pleomorphism
    • mitoses
  • prognosis
    1. recurrence after surgery in 12-24 mnths
    2. progression to grade IV
    3. death from tumor
Term
gliobastoma multiforme (clinical presentation, CT/MRI, gross and microscopic pathology, prognosis)
Definition
  • clinical presentation
    • cerebral hemispheric white matter in adults > 50 yrs old
    • brainstem of children
  • CT/MRI
    • heterogeneous, hyperdense lesion
    • peripheral rim of contrast enhancement (ring enhancement)
    • significant peritumoral edema and "mass effect"
      • ventricular effacement
      • shift of midline structures
  • gross pathology
    • hemorrhage, necrosis
    • may cross to contralateral hemisphere in corpus callosum (butterfly glioma)
  • microscopic pathology
    • hypercellularity, pleomorphism, mitoses, vascular proliferation, necrosis
      • necrotic areas surrounded by radially arranged still viable tumor cells (palisade)
  • prognosis
    • death from tumor in 12-24 months
    • adjuvant radiation therapy may prolong survival by several months
Term
ependymoma (clinical presentation, gross pathology, CT/MRI, microscopic pathology, prognosis)
Definition
  • clinical presentation
    • IV ventricle in children
    • spinal cord of adults
      • special myxopapillary variant in lumbosacral cord with favorable prognosis (grade I)
  • gross pathology
    • solid/papillary intraventricular tumor
    • relatively circumscribed intramedullary spinal cord mass
      • better circumscribed than diffuse astrocytomas, but still tend to recur
  • CT/MRI
    • heterogeneously enhancing IV ventricular or spinal cord mass, sometimes with calcification
  • microscopic pathology
    • glial tumor
    • perivascular pseudorossetes
    • with or without ependymal canals
  • prognosis
    • survival depends on age, location, resectability
    • survival shorter/worse prognosis with:
      • kids
      • intracranial location
      • incomplete resection
    • recurrence, dissemination in CSF
Term
oligodendroglioma: clinical presentation, CT, gross and microscopic pathology, prognosis
Definition
  • clinical presentation- cerebral hemispheric white matter of adults
  • CT- calcification common and may follow cortical ribbon in serpiginous pattern
  • gross pathology
    • gray pink mass with cysts, calcification, hemorrhage
  • microscopic pathology
    • uinform cells with clear cytoplasm and central nuclei (fried eggs)
    • acutely branching capillary stroma (chicken wire vasculature)
Term
medulloblastoma: clinical presentation, CT/MRI, gross and microscopic pathology, prognosis
Definition
  • clinical presentation
    • cerebellar vermis tumor in children
    • originates from primitive precursor cells, probably in cerebellar external granular cell layer
  • CT/MRI- hyperdense contrast enhancing lesion
  • gross pathology
    • variable circumscription
    • gray-white to hemorrhagic
  • microscopic pathology
    • small round blue cell tumor
      • cells with high N/C ratio
      • Homer-Wright rosettes
      • high mitotic activity, apoptosis, pleomorphic
      • may show neuronal and/or glial differentiation
  • prognosis
    • surgery plus radiation/chemo increases chances of survival in 5 yrs to 50-70%
    • possible recurrence, dissemination in CSF
Term
meningioma: origin, clinical presentation, CT/MRI, gross pathology, microscopic pathology, prognosis
Definition
  • origin- extra-axial tumor derived from arachnoid cap cell of leptomeninges
  • clinical presentation
    • attached to dura over cerebral convexity, falx cerebri, base of skull (sphenoid wing, petrous ridge, clivus, foramen magnum), spinal canal
    • adult patients with female predominance
  • CT/MRI
    • extra-axial isodense mass with contrast enhancement
    • may show streak of enhancement trailing off from main tumor ("dural tail")
  • gross pathology- well circumscribed firm gray-white mass anchored on dura
  • microscopic pathology
    • architecture composed of varying proportion of spindles and whirls
    • minimal pleomorphism, mitotic activity
    • may see round concentric calcification (Psammoma bodies)
  • pathogenesis
    1. slow growth over long period
    2. can entrap spinal/cranial nerves, bv's
    3. may infiltrate dural venous sinuses and overly bone with secondary bone thickenin (hyperostosis)
      • progesterone R's may be present
Term
meningioma: genetics
Definition
  • allelic loss of chromosome 22 leads to activation of NF2 oncogene
    • multiple meningiomas
Term
Schwannoma: clinical presentation, gross and microscopic pathology, prognosis, genetic disorder associated with
Definition
  • clinical presentation
    • cerebellopontine angle tumor in adults with hearing loss
      • vestibular schwannoma)
    • spinal canal, attached to nerve root (usually dorsal) with nerve root compression
  • gross pathology
    • well circumscribed, encapsulated, attached to nerve root
    • may show degenerative changes (cysts, hemorrhage)
  • microscopic pathology
    • biphasic with dense (antoni A) and loose (antoni B) zones
    • alignment of nuclei with plisades (verocay bodies)
    • parent nerve pushed to one side
  • prongosis
    • slow growth over loong period
    • surgically curable
    • may affect peripheral nerves
  • genetics- multiple schwannomas characteristic of neurofibromatosis type 2
Term
neurofibroma: gross and microscopic pathology, prognosis, genetic d/o associated with
Definition
  • gross pathology
    • unencapsulated, diffuse fusiform expansion of nerve
    • soft with shiny gelatinous cut surface
  • microscopic pathology
    • loose myxoid background with small wavy or comma shaped schwann cell nuclei
    • axons of parent nerve embedded in, separated by, tumor
  • prognosis
    • slow growth over long peroid
    • may affect peripheral nerves and terminal nerve branches in skin
  • genetics- multiple neurofibromas characteristic of neurofibromatosis type I
    • nerve sheath tumors in NF1 may become malignant
Term
Metastatic tumors of CNS: common origins
Definition
  • Lung
  • Breast
  • Skin (melanoma)
  • Kidney
  • GI

think "Lots of Bad Stuff Kills Glia"

Term
clinical presentation of metastatic tumors
Definition
  • multiple CNS tumors
    • gray-white junction of cerebral hemispheres favored site, but may occur anywhere
    • diffuse spread in subarachnoid space (carcinomatous meningitis)
    • dural infiltration (breast, prostate)
Term
metastatic tumor of CNS: gross and microscopic pathology, CT/MRI, prognosis
Definition
  • CT/MRI- multiple heterogeneous masses with contrast enhancement and surrounding edema
  • gross pathology- circumscribed tumors with necrosis, hemorrhage
  • microscopic pathology- histology same as primary neoplasm
  • prognosis
    • influenced by number and location of metastases, sensitivity of primary tumor to therapy
    • medial survival with multiple brain metastases treated with radiation 3-6 months
Supporting users have an ad free experience!