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Successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: A case report

BACKGROUND: Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery (GKRS) facilitates precisely focused radiation to an intracranial target while minimizing substantial off-target radiation in the surrounding normal tissue. Meningiomas attached to or invading the superior sagittal sinus may result in sinus occlusion...

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Autores principales: Nwachuku, Enyinna, Duehr, James, Pease, Matthew W., Lunsford, L. Dade, Monaco, Edward A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Scientific Scholar 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7982102/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33767890
http://dx.doi.org/10.25259/SNI_562_2020
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author Nwachuku, Enyinna
Duehr, James
Pease, Matthew W.
Lunsford, L. Dade
Monaco, Edward A.
author_facet Nwachuku, Enyinna
Duehr, James
Pease, Matthew W.
Lunsford, L. Dade
Monaco, Edward A.
author_sort Nwachuku, Enyinna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery (GKRS) facilitates precisely focused radiation to an intracranial target while minimizing substantial off-target radiation in the surrounding normal tissue. Meningiomas attached to or invading the superior sagittal sinus may result in sinus occlusion and are often impossible to completely resect safely. The authors describe successful management of a patient with a meningioma located completely inside the posterior aspect of the superior sagittal sinus. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 46-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with progressive generalized headaches accompanied by worsening vision. The patient underwent a diagnostic brain magnetic resonance imaging which showed a solitary a 7 × 6 × 10 mm homogeneously contrast-enhancing lesion within the lumen of the posterior aspect of superior sagittal sinus without ventricular enlargement or peritumoral edema. The lesion was thought to be a meningioma radiographically. To evaluate the suspected increased intracranial pressure, a lumbar puncture was subsequently performed and demonstrated an opening pressure of 30 cm H2O. After drainage of 40 cc of CSF, the spinal closing pressure was 9 cm H2O. After failure of conservative management with acetazolamide, and determination of surgical inoperability due to the critical intraluminal location of the mass lesion, the patient underwent Gamma Knife radiosurgery. The 0.36 cc tumor was treated as an outpatient in the Perfexion® model Gamma Knife with a highly conformal and selective plan that enclosed the 3D geometry of the tumor with a minimal margin tumor dose of 14 gy at the 50% isodose. Three months after GKRS, the patient reported continued reduction in the frequency and severity of both her headaches and her visual disturbance. Ophthalmological consultation noted progressive resolution of her optic disc edema confirmed by formal optical coherence tomography. The patient is now 3 years out from GKRS with complete resolution of headache symptoms along with persistent reduction in tumor size (3 × 1 × 4 mm) on serial period imaging and resolution of papilledema. CONCLUSION: Tumors located in such critical anatomic regions, as in our patient, should be considered for primary GKRS when the risks of biopsy or removal are too high. GKRS was able to provide great radiographic and clinical result in an intricately located meningioma.
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spelling pubmed-79821022021-03-24 Successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: A case report Nwachuku, Enyinna Duehr, James Pease, Matthew W. Lunsford, L. Dade Monaco, Edward A. Surg Neurol Int Case Report BACKGROUND: Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery (GKRS) facilitates precisely focused radiation to an intracranial target while minimizing substantial off-target radiation in the surrounding normal tissue. Meningiomas attached to or invading the superior sagittal sinus may result in sinus occlusion and are often impossible to completely resect safely. The authors describe successful management of a patient with a meningioma located completely inside the posterior aspect of the superior sagittal sinus. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 46-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with progressive generalized headaches accompanied by worsening vision. The patient underwent a diagnostic brain magnetic resonance imaging which showed a solitary a 7 × 6 × 10 mm homogeneously contrast-enhancing lesion within the lumen of the posterior aspect of superior sagittal sinus without ventricular enlargement or peritumoral edema. The lesion was thought to be a meningioma radiographically. To evaluate the suspected increased intracranial pressure, a lumbar puncture was subsequently performed and demonstrated an opening pressure of 30 cm H2O. After drainage of 40 cc of CSF, the spinal closing pressure was 9 cm H2O. After failure of conservative management with acetazolamide, and determination of surgical inoperability due to the critical intraluminal location of the mass lesion, the patient underwent Gamma Knife radiosurgery. The 0.36 cc tumor was treated as an outpatient in the Perfexion® model Gamma Knife with a highly conformal and selective plan that enclosed the 3D geometry of the tumor with a minimal margin tumor dose of 14 gy at the 50% isodose. Three months after GKRS, the patient reported continued reduction in the frequency and severity of both her headaches and her visual disturbance. Ophthalmological consultation noted progressive resolution of her optic disc edema confirmed by formal optical coherence tomography. The patient is now 3 years out from GKRS with complete resolution of headache symptoms along with persistent reduction in tumor size (3 × 1 × 4 mm) on serial period imaging and resolution of papilledema. CONCLUSION: Tumors located in such critical anatomic regions, as in our patient, should be considered for primary GKRS when the risks of biopsy or removal are too high. GKRS was able to provide great radiographic and clinical result in an intricately located meningioma. Scientific Scholar 2021-03-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7982102/ /pubmed/33767890 http://dx.doi.org/10.25259/SNI_562_2020 Text en Copyright: © 2021 Surgical Neurology International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
spellingShingle Case Report
Nwachuku, Enyinna
Duehr, James
Pease, Matthew W.
Lunsford, L. Dade
Monaco, Edward A.
Successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: A case report
title Successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: A case report
title_full Successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: A case report
title_fullStr Successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: A case report
title_full_unstemmed Successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: A case report
title_short Successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: A case report
title_sort successful management of an intraluminal superior sagittal sinus meningioma causing elevated intracranial pressure using gamma knife radiosurgery in subacute setting: a case report
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7982102/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33767890
http://dx.doi.org/10.25259/SNI_562_2020
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