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- Makoto Nakamura, Florian Roser, Otto Bundschuh, Peter Vorkapic, and Madjid Samii.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Nordstadt Hospital, Hanover, Germany.
- Surg Neurol. 2003 Jun 1; 59 (6): 491-503; discussion 503-4.
BackgroundPrimary intraventricular meningiomas are notably rare with an incidence of 0.5 to 3% among all intracranial meningiomas. We present a series of 16 patients with histologically verified intraventricular meningiomas, the clinical and neuroradiological findings, and surgical results.MethodsThe charts of the patients including surgical records, discharge letters, histologic records, follow up records and imaging studies were analyzed retrospectively from 1978 to 2001.ResultsCollectively, 110 primary intraventricular tumors were surgically resected in our neurosurgical department from 1983 through 2001. There were 16 patients with primary intraventricular meningiomas. Thirteen (81.3%) of these tumors were located in the lateral ventricles, one (6.2%) in the third and two (12.5%) in the forth ventricle. Mean age was 47.1 years and there was no difference in incidence between the sexes. The most common presenting symptoms and signs were headache, mental change, and hemianopia. Other symptoms included gait ataxia, vertigo, hemiparesis, double vision, aphasia, and alexia/agraphia. On CT and MR studies most of the lateral ventricular meningiomas were located in the trigone (11 cases), two tumors originated at the level of foramen of Monro or in the frontal horn. The tumors were approached via a transcortical parieto-occipital (11 cases), transcallosal (3 cases), or median suboccipital (2 cases) route. Total removal was achieved in 15 out of 16 cases. There was no operative mortality. Clinical improvement was seen in symptoms like headaches, paresis, cerebellar signs and visual disturbances, whereas mental change showed less improvement.ConclusionsAlthough intraventricular meningiomas are quite rare, they represent an important differential diagnosis of intraventricular neoplasms. They can reach a substantial size by the time of diagnosis, yet total removal can be achieved in most cases.
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