Search results for "brain tumor"
showing 10 items of 90 documents
A novel neural stem cell-derived immunocompetent mouse model of glioblastoma for preclinical studies
2020
AbstractGlioblastomas are the most lethal tumors affecting the central nervous system in adults. Simple and inexpensive syngeneicin vivomodels that closely mirror human glioblastoma, including interactions between tumor and immune cells, are urgently needed for deciphering glioma biology and developing more effective treatments. Here, we generated glioblastoma cell lines by repeatedin-vivopassaging of cells isolated from a neural stem cell-specific Pten/p53 double-knockout genetic mouse brain tumor model. Transcriptome and genome analyses of the cell lines revealed molecular heterogeneity comparable to that observed in human glioblastoma. Upon orthotopic transplantation into syngeneic hosts…
Implications of irradiating the subventricular zone stem cell niche
2016
Radiation therapy is a standard treatment for brain tumor patients. However, it comes with side effects, such as neurological deficits. While likely multi-factorial, the effect may in part be associated with the impact of radiation on the neurogenic niches. In the adult mammalian brain, the neurogenic niches are localized in the subventricular zone (SVZ) of the lateral ventricles and the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, where the neural stem cells (NSCs) reside. Several reports showed that radiation produces a drastic decrease in the proliferative capacity of these regions, which is related to functional decline. In particular, radiation to the SVZ led to a reduced long-term olfactory memo…
P03.04 Signaling questions assessing brain tumor patients’ distress in clinical routine - a feasibility study
2019
Abstract BACKGROUND Approximately 20%-35% of patients with intracranial tumors show depressive symptoms and distress. Assessment in these patients remains challenging due to cognitive and/or neurological deficits. We developed 3 signaling questions in order to assess patients during patient-doctor consultation. The aim is to implement them in clinical routine and to compare the results with patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) along disease trajectory. MATERIAL AND METHODS Patients were prospectively examined in a structured interview applying the 3 following questions: 1),Has your mood worsened? (I)”; 2),Are you strained by physical changes? (II)”; 3),Has your faculty of thought decre…
Frequency, Risk-Factors and Survival of Children With Atypical Teratoid Rhabdoid Tumors (AT/RT) of the CNS Diagnosed between 1988 and 2004, and Regis…
2011
Purpose To analyze the frequency, prognostic factors, and outcome of children with atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors (AT/RT), a rare and highly malignant embryonal brain tumor. Materials and Methods Clinical data of patients diagnosed between 1988 and 2004 with AT/RT who were registered to the German HIT trial center, were correlated with outcome. Patient numbers for AT/RT were compared to numbers for primitive neuroectodermal tumors and medulloblastomas (PNET/MB) registered to the population-based HIT trials. Results We identified 56 patients with the centrally confirmed histopathological diagnosis of AT/RT with a median age of 1.2 years (range, 0.1–14.0 years). The AT/RT:PNET/MB ratio was…
A Pooled Analysis of Extremely Low-Frequency Magnetic Fields and Childhood Brain Tumors
2010
Pooled analyses may provide etiologic insight about associations between exposure and disease. In contrast to childhood leukemia, no pooled analyses of childhood brain tumors and exposure to extremely low-frequency magnetic fields (ELF-MFs) have been conducted. The authors carried out a pooled analysis based on primary data (1960–2001) from 10 studies of ELF-MF exposure and childhood brain tumors to assess whether the combined results, adjusted for potential confounding, indicated an association. The odds ratios for childhood brain tumors in ELF-MF exposure categories of 0.1–<0.2 μT, 0.2–<0.4 μT, and ≥0.4 μT were 0.95 (95% confidence interval: 0.65, 1.41), 0.70 (95% CI: 0.40, 1.22), and 1.1…
With a Little Help from My Friends: The Role of Intraoperative Fluorescent Dyes in the Surgical Management of High-Grade Gliomas
2018
High-grade gliomas (HGGs) are the most frequent primary malignant brain tumors in adults, which lead to death within two years of diagnosis. Maximal safe resection of malignant gliomas as the first step of multimodal therapy is an accepted goal in malignant glioma surgery. Gross total resection has an important role in improving overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS), but identification of tumor borders is particularly difficult in HGGS. For this reason, imaging adjuncts, such as 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) or fluorescein sodium (FS) have been proposed as superior strategies for better defining the limits of surgical resection for HGG. 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) is i…
Using anatomic and metabolic imaging in stereotactic radio neuro-surgery treatments
2016
Neurosurgical Interventions for Intracranial Metastases
1987
In any neurosurgical material among the space-occupying neoplastic lesions in the brain there is an average frequency between 3 and 5% of deposits from malignant tumors of extracranial origin, i.e. metastases1,2,7. Definite regularities exist as regards the frequency with which particular tumors give rise to cerebral metastases and likewise as regards the incidence of solitary metastases (about 50% of cases), while in about a half of these patients we find several metastases. These lesions can involve the cerebral hemispheres, as well as the cerebellum and the brain stem26,28.
Classification of Brain Tumors
1989
In 1914, L. Bruns stated in Krause’s General Surgery of Brain Disorders that brain tumors include all neoplasias growing within the cranium and that they comprise three groups: (1) true tumors, (2) infectious granulomas, and (3) parasites. Current usage is more precise and is limited to the first of Bruns’ categories. Even so, brain tumors constitute a large and very heterogeneous group. A taxonomic approach to classification is necessary if we are to make sense of an initially disorganized set of observations, compare the findings of different observers, and attempt a prognostic evaluation.
Tinnitus with Headaches
2011
1. Patients with tinnitus frequently have headaches, but the relation between these two disorders is not always casual. 2. Headaches and tinnitus could be symptoms of the same disease. 3. Idiopathic intracranial hypertension is a syndrome in which headaches and tinnitus often occur together. 4. Headaches and tinnitus often occur together with other focal symptoms in symptomatic intracranial hypertension. 5. Intracranial vascular abnormalities such as arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) can occur together with any kind of headache with paroxysmal tinnitus. 6. Tinnitus may be one of the signs of a basilar migraine. 7. Headaches are a very frequent symptom after head trauma, and tinnitus is als…