| Literature DB >> 26885468 |
Baran Yılmaz1, Murat Şakir Ekşi2, Mustafa Kemal Demir3, Akın Akakın1, Zafer Orkun Toktaş1, Özlem Yapıcıer4, Türker Kılıç1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Glioblastoma is the most common and the most malignant type of gliomas. Cerebral hemispheres are usual locations for gliomas. Isolated third ventricular presentation is very rare for glioblastomas. A new case of isolated third ventricular glioblastoma has been presented in this report. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 36-year-old woman was admitted to outpatient clinic with headache, blurred vision and confusion. A head CT scan and MRI had showed third ventricular mass lesion with obstructive hydrocephalus. Previous to her admission to our clinic, a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt had been inserted and her hydrocephalus had been relieved to some extent in acute settings. In our clinic, stereotactic biopsy was performed and a second ventriculoperitoneal shunt was inserted from the opposite site. Histopathological diagnosis was glioblastoma. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy were started immediately after the surgery. Patient's hydrocephalus has resolved and she was well at post-operative 6th month. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: In differential diagnosis list of the tumors presenting in the third ventricle, there are plenty of tumors such as colloid cyst, meningioma, germinoma, craniopharyngioma, lymphoma, choroid plexus papilloma, subependymal giant cell astrocytoma, chiasmatic and hypothalamic benign astrocytoma. Ring enhancement of this region pathology is a peculiar sign for glioblastoma, yet not pathognomonic. Tumor histology is crucial to yield the final diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Biopsy; Glioblastoma; Hydrocephalus; Third ventricle; Ventriculo-peritoneal shunt
Year: 2016 PMID: 26885468 PMCID: PMC4742454 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-1746-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Isolated third ventricular glioblastoma cases described in literature
| Author(s) | Number of cases | Age (years)/sex | Clinical features | Neuroradiological features | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yasargil ( | 4 | N/A | N/A | Anterior portion of the third ventricle | Frontal interhemispheric approach |
| Lee and Manzano ( | 1 | 59/M | Depression, anxiety disorder, urinary incontinence, disorientation, memory deficits, gait disorder | Third-ventricle ring enhanced lesion with obstructive hydrocephalus | Ventriculostomy, transcallosal partial removal of the tumor, postoperative radio- and chemo-therapy |
| Albert Lasierra ( | 2 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Lejeune et al. ( | 2 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Villani and Tomei ( | 1 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Vougiouklakis et al. ( | 1 | 34/M | Unconsciousness | Hydocephalus, hemorrhagic third ventricle lesion | Died |
| Prieto et al. ( | 1 | 29/F | Polydipsia, polyuria, depression | Heterogenous anterior third ventricle lesion with ring-enhancement, obstructive hydrocephalus | V-P shunt for hydrocephalus, frontal-transcortical-transventricular, subtotal removal of the lesion |
| Hariri et al. ( | 1 | 62/F | Headache, somnolence, cognitive decline | Homogenous, non-enhancing mass with mild hydrocephalus | N/A |
| Present case | 1 | 36/F | Headache, blurred vision, confusion | Heterogeneously enhanced multi-cystic lesion with obstructive hydrocephalus | V-P shunt for hydrocephalus, stereotactic biopsy from the tumor, post-operative radiotherapy and chemotherapy |
F female, M male, N/A not available, V-P ventriculo-peritoneal
Fig. 1A multi-cystic heterogeneously enhanced mass is observed in the third ventricle on T1-weighted brain MR (a–c). Temporal horns are dilated despite previous V-P shunt surgery (d)
Fig. 2Histopathological appearance of the tumor (H&E ×200)
Fig. 3Post-operative 6th month brain MRI depicts resolution of hydrocephalus and more necrotic consistency of the lesion