| Literature DB >> 25435938 |
Zhenxing Sun1, Dan Yuan2, Zhiqiang Cui1, Yaxing Sun3, Junsheng Yang4, Pengxiang Yan5, Huancong Zuo1.
Abstract
Central neurocytoma is a relatively rare tumor of the central nervous system. Young adults are most commonly affected, with a similar incidence in males and females. The tumor is predominantly occurs in the ventricular system of the brain. The tumor is benign and exhibits a good response to surgical resection and radiation therapy. The typical central neurocytoma occurs in the supratentorial ventricular system in young adults. Extraventricular neurocytomas are rare in the spinal cord. In the present study, two cases of craniocervical neurocytomas and the clinical presentation, magnetic resonance imaging observations, pathological features and two-year follow-up results are reported. The first case presents a 26 year old male with an intramedullary mass extending from the medualla oblongata to the T4 segement of the spine. The second case presents the case of a 48 year old female with an intramedullary mass extending from the oblongata to the T2 segement of the spine. The two patients underwent subtotal resection of the masses and post-operative radiotherapy was administered for three months. Post-operative magentic resoance imaging revealed no tumor recurrence in the two cases, two years after resection. The relevant literature is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: central neurocytoma; craniocervical; extraventricular; literature review
Year: 2014 PMID: 25435938 PMCID: PMC4246651 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.2616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1Case one: MRI showing an expansive intramedullary mass extending from the medulla oblongata to the T4 segment of the spine. (A) The mass was isointense on T1-weighted images and (B) hyperintense with a partially cystic mass on T2-weighted images. (C) The mass showed intense heterogeneous enhancement of a solid tumor from the C3 to C7 segments following the injection of gadolinium diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid. (D and E) Hematoxylin and eosin staining from the biopsy of the mass showed a neoplasm composed of uniform, round cells with round, central nuclei and a perinuclear halo [(D), magnification, ×400; (E), magnification, ×100]. (G and F) Post-operative MRI showing no recurrence of the solid tumor. MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 2Case one: Immunohistochemical staining revealing positivity for synaptophysin. Magnification, ×400.
Figure 3Case two: MRI showing an expansive intramedullary mass extending from the medulla oblongata to the T2 segment. (A) The mass was isointense on T1-weighted images and (B) hyperintense with a partially cystic mass on T2-weighted images. (C) The mass at the C5-T1 level showed intense heterogeneous enhancement of a solid tumor following the injection of gadolinium diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid. (D) Hematoxylin and eosin staining showed a lesion composed of uniformly small, round cells (magnification, ×100). (E) Post-operative MRI showing residual tumor. MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 4Case two: Immunohistochemical staining revealing positivity for neuronal nuclear antigen. Magnification, ×100.
Summary of the literature review of neurocytomas in the cervical spinal cord.
| First author, year (ref.) | Age, years | Location | MRI enhancement | Surgery | Radiotherapy | Recurrence (follow-up time) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tatter | 65 | C2-C6 | Homogenous | Biopsy | Yes | No (10 years) |
| 49 | C3-C4 | Homogenous | Total resection | Yes | Yes (30 months) | |
| Stapleton | 12 | C4-T1 | Heterogeneous | Total resection | No | No (24 months) |
| Ashkan | 12 | C6-T1 | Homogenous | Subtotal resection | No | No (33 months) |
| Sharma | 24 | C5-T1 | Homogenous | Total resection | No | Yes (10 months) |
| Gokham, 2008 ( | 49 | C3-C5 | Homogenous | Subtotal resection | No | Unknown |
| Polli | 15 | C1-T11 | Heterogeneous | Subtotal resection | No | Succumbed |
| 6 | C1-C7 | Heterogeneous | Subtotal resection | No | No (12 months) | |
| Gepp Rde | 15 | Cervical spinal cord | Unknown | Subtotal resection | No | Unknown |
MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.