o 50% spontaneous / 50% AD
o Cutaneous Hyperpigmented Macules (Café au Lait) o Pigmented Nodules Of The Iris (Lisch Nodules)
Answer:2. Glioblastoma multiforme
Usually large, heterogenous masses with central necrosis, thick, irregular “shaggy” walls, and increased vascularity with haemorrhage
• Marked mass effect & oedema
• Often find varying degrees of anaplasia within the same tumour
∴biopsy can be misleading
*LW: Difficult question, possibly poor recall given no perfect answer:
Preferred options of DNET vs PXA
1) DNET: multicystic bubbly cortical mass, commonly temporal lobe
2) Pilocytic astrocytoma: enhancing nodule with associated cyst, rarely cortical.
3) Anaplastic Astrocytoma may cause solid appearing cortical mass, however anaplastic occur in adulthood mean age - 40-50yrs.
4) Mesial sclerosis: neronal loss and gliosis
5) Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma: cortical enhancing mass with adjacent cyst, temporal lobe most common, older children.
Previous notes:
i thin it is 3 or 5: in the absence of stated associated cystic component astrocytoma possible, while age argues against. However question states age and temporal lobe, thus PXA felt most likely.
• Major sites o Predilection for areas supplied by penetrating branches of MCA & basilar artery: • 2/3rd's in basal ganglia • Putamen / external capsule 60 – 65 % • Thalamus 15 – 25 % • Pons 5 – 10% • Cerebellum 2 – 5 % • These behave like space occuping lesions leading to herniation and obstructive hydrocephalus • Subcortical lobar white matter 1 – 2 %
Answer:
5. Degeneration of the central portion /body of the corpus callosum This is a feature of Marchiafavia Bignami disease (Big Robbins p1329
o Granulomata may be secondary to hematogenous spread of systemic disease or may evolve from extension of CSF infection into the adjacent parenchyma via cortical veins or small penetrating arteries
o Pathologically, the granuloma is composed of a central zone of solid caseation necrosis, surrounded by a capsule of collagenous tissue, epithelioid cells, multinucleated giant cells, and mononuclear inflammatory cells
• Tuberculomas may be found in the cerebrum, cerebellum, subarachnoid space, or subdural or epidural space.
• Parenchymal disease most often involves the corticomedullary junction and periventricular regions, as expected for hematogenous dissemination.
• Most tuberculomas are supratentorial
answer: 4. The pons is a rare site of hypertensive hemorrhage (<1%) (5-10%)
6. 89.APRIL02 Which of the following statements IS LEAST correct concerning hypertensive changes in the brain?
• Patients coming to postmortem examination may show an edematous brain weighing more than normal, with or without transtentorial or tonsillar herniation
Answer:4. Depletion of oligodendrocytes is a feature of MS lesions (Loss of myelin & oligodendrocytes)
Answer:3. They do not result in hydrocephalus (100% have ventriculomegaly)
Answer:
1. Wernicke’s encephalopathy
answer:
4. Involvement of posterior 2/3 superior temporal gyrus
LJS opinion* I think putamen changes unlikely
Temporal lobes involved, anterior more than posterior
Can’t find involvement of deep structures anywhere. So I think 5 is uncommon finding
all are feature of TB haha
Answer:3. Commonest presentation is headache (alterations in mood,memory and behavior is most common presentation)
1. Necrosis and areas of different histology
incomplete questionRobins: 1308 The histologic appearance of glioblastoma is similar to anaplastic astrocytoma with the additional features of necrosis and vascular/endothelial cell proliferation.Necrosis in glioblastoma often occurs in a serpentine pattern in areas of hypercellularity.Tumor cells collect along the edges of the necrotic regions, producing a histologic pattern referred to as pseudo-palisadingThe vascular cell prolif- eration produces tufts of cells that pile up and bulge into thelumen; the minimal criterion for this feature is a double layer of endothelial cells. With marked vascular cell proliferation the tuft forms a ball-like structure, the glomeruloid body. VEGF, pro- duced by malignant astrocytes in response to hypoxia, contrib- utes to this distinctive vascular change. Since histologic features can be extremely variable from one region to another, small biopsy specimens may not be representative of the entire tumor.
(Most commonly superficial and supratentorial (temporal > frontal > parietal))
*LW:
Correct terminology is osmotic demyelination syndrome / osmotic myelinolysis; which is a global term of both central pontine and extra pontine myelinolysis.
Central pontine myelinolysis clinical features:
dysarthria and dysphagia (secondary to corticobulbar fibre involvement), a flaccid quadriparesis (from corticospinal tract involvement) which later becomes spastic, all from involvement of the basis pontis.
if the lesion extends into the tegmentum of the pons - pupillary, oculomotor abnormalities may occur. There may be an apparent change in conscious level reflecting the “locked-in syndrome” that a large lesion in this site is particularly liable to produce.
Extra pontine myelinolysis clinical features:
Movement disorders
Mutism, parkinsonism, dystonia, and catatonia