| Literature DB >> 23638625 |
Irene Riezzo1, Rosanna Zamparese, Margherita Neri, Francesco De Stefano, Ruggero Parente, Cristoforo Pomara, Emanuela Turillazzi, Francesco Ventura, Vittorio Fineschi.
Abstract
Sudden death from an undiagnosed primary intracranial neoplasm is an exceptionally rare event, with reported frequencies in the range of 0.02% to 2.1% in medico-legal autopsy series and only 12% of all cases of sudden, unexpected death due to primary intracranial tumors are due to glioblastomas. We present three cases of sudden, unexpected death due to glioblastoma, with different brain localization and expression. A complete methodological forensic approach by means of autopsy, histological and immunohistochemical examinations let us to conclude for an acute central dysregulation caused by glioblastoma and relative complication with rapid increase of intracranial pressure as cause of death. Although modern diagnostic imaging techniques have revolutionized the diagnosis of brain tumors, the autopsy and the careful gross examination and section of the fixed brain (with coronal section) is still the final word in determining exact location, topography, mass effects and histology and secondary damage of brain tumor and contributed the elucidation of the cause of death. Immunohistochemistry and proteomic analysis are mandatory in such cases. VIRTUAL SLIDES: The virtual slide(s) for this article can be found here: http://www.diagnosticpathology.diagnomx.eu/vs/1218574899466985.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23638625 PMCID: PMC3652782 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1596-8-73
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Figure 1Case 1: the brain weighed 1550 g and measured cm 19×16.5×6 and showed stasis and massive edema. A spherical gelatinous solid mass (black circle), measuring 1 cm in diameter was attached in the right brain stem.
Figure 2Case 2: on coronal section, the left temporal lobe showed a large necrotic hemorrhagic mass lesion, which measured cm 3×2.5×2.2, surrounded by edematous tissue.
Figure 3Samples taken from right brain stem and temporal lobe (case I), left temporal lobe (case II), and from left frontal lobe (case III): we observed dense cellularity, shrinking pleomorphism, and zones of coagulative necrosis lined (white arrow) by “palisading” tumor cells with nuclear pleomorphism.
Figure 4Cells (arrows) within deeply eosinophilic masses (cases 2 and 3), complex, “glomeruloid” quality of the microvascular proliferation (arrows) (proliferating blood vessels come to be lined by cells heaped up in disorderly fashion and are transformed into glomeruloid or solid tufts), multinucleated giant cells (case 1).
Figure 5The immunohistochemical examination of the brain specimens revealed a positive reaction for antibodies anti-GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein). Small elongated cells and extreme cytologic pleomorphism were evident.
Figure 6The cells have large nucleus and a prominent nucleolus, have a certain resemblance to the neurons, but are GFAP +.
Figure 7Trapped reactive astrocytes were large, stellate, often peri-vascular and intensely reactive for GFAP. The tumor cells were weakly immunoreactive with vimentin (case 2) and S-100 (case 1).
Figure 8Western blot. Proteomic analysis shows the different bands and different concentrations of GFAP in brain stem of case 1, positive control (dementia cases) and negative control (normal brain).
Cases of sudden death due to glioblastoma multiforme published in the current literature
| 1 | Sutton JT et al. (2010) | M | 7 | Right frontal lobe | 7 | 2 hours before death complying of a headache |
| 2 | Vougiouklakis T. et al. (2006) | M | 34 | Third ventricle, at level of the foramen of Monro | 6,9 | No neurological symptoms. The man was found unconscious in bed |
| 3 | Shiferaw K. et al. (2006) | M | 48 | Right frontal lobe | 4 | Patient with schizophrenia. Five day prior death, the man was disoriented, slow, and somnolent. |
| 4 | Elgamal EA. et al. (2006) | M | 10 week | Left parietal lobe | / | Irritability excessively for 1 day and large vomit |
| 5 | Matschke J. et al. (2005) | F | 33 | Right fronto-parietal lobe | / | No neurological symptoms. The woman was found dead in her apartment |
| 6 | | M | 52 | Left cingulated gyrus with infiltration of the thalamus | / | No neurological symptoms. The man suddenly collapsed at home |
| 7 | | M | 75 | Left cerebellar hemisphere with infiltration of adjacent brainstem structures | / | No neurological symptoms. The man was found lying dead in his bed |
| 8 | Eberhart C.G. et al. (2001) | M | 39 | left frontal lobe | 5 | No neurological symptoms. The man was found unresponsive on the bathroom |
| 9 | | M | 35 | Right cerebral hemisphere showed a large mass lesion, involving the basal ganglia and internal capsule | 5 | No neurological symptoms. The man was found unresponsive |
| 10 | | M | 45 | Right frontal lobe | 4 | The man died after his automobile left the road at a high rate of speed and impacted a tree. |
| 11 | Matsumoto H. (1993) | M | 20 | Left temporal lobe | / | / |
| 12 | Present paper | M | 71 | Right medulla and right temporal lobe | 2 | Headache, confusional state and difficulty in walking few hours before the death |
| 13 | | M | 79 | Left temporal lobe | 3 | Confusion, slackening, sleepiness, and tremor of the upper limbs start few days before the death |
| 14 | M | 43 | Left frontal lobe | 3,5 | No neurological symptoms. The man was found dead in a slope near the track of the railway. |
Figure 9Primary and secondary glioblastomas: distinct genetic pathways. (Modified from 39).