Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3092312 Surgical Neurology 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundIntracranial hemangiopericytoma represents a rare intracranial tumor that is typically difficult to distinguish from meningioma based on clinical presentation and radiographic findings. These inherently aggressive neoplasms have been observed to occur in numerous intracranial compartments; however, isolated involvement of the CPA is essentially unreported. The authors present a case of a young lady with presumed right acoustic schwannoma, which proved to be HPC on histopathology. The case is described; and a review of the literature pertaining to the diagnosis, optimal management, and follow-up for these lesions is provided.Case DescriptionA 37-year-old Asian woman presented with a 7-month history of right ear and mandible numbness, as well as subjective hearing loss involving the right ear. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated the presence of a homogeneously enhancing extraaxial lesion in the right CPA, radiographically suggestive of an acoustic schwannoma. The lesion proved to be an intracranial HPC on histologic sections. Review of the neurosurgical literature yielded only one prior detailed account of HPC confined to the CPA. The patient underwent right retrosigmoid craniotomy for gross total resection of the mass, followed by stereotactic radiotherapy several weeks postoperatively.ConclusionGiven the fundamentally different treatment approach for HPCs over other more common CPA tumors, it is imperative that the treating surgeon consider this rare diagnosis when evaluating patients with lesions localized to this area. Specifically, gross total resection, followed by adjuvant SRT, provides patients with the highest probability for disease-free survival, based on current evidence in the neurosurgical literature.

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