Cerebellopontine Angle Mass Flashcards

1
Q

The combination of __ and __ is suggestive of a cerebellopontine mass

A

The combination of hearing loss and facial paralysis is suggestive of a cerebellopontine mass

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2
Q

Acoustic neuroma / Vestibulocochlear schwannoma

A
  • Benign tumor derived from Schwann cells arising from the vestibular portion of the acoustic nerve
  • Most common tumor found in the CPA (accounting for 80% of cases)
  • Age of onset: ~30-60 years if idiopathic, 18-24 years if NF2-associated
  • Presentation: Unilateral sensorineural hearing loss. Sometimes vertigo, headaches, facial nerve palsy.
  • Most cases are idiopathic, some are associated with NF2
  • Treatment: Stereotactic radiotherapy available for tumors up to 3 cm in size. If larger, conventional neurosurgery.
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3
Q

Cerebellopontine angle

A

The angle between the cerebellum pons, and temporal lobe

This space contains cranial nerves V through XI

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4
Q

Two most common cerebellopontine angle masses

A
  1. Acoustic neuroma / Vestibulocochlear schwannoma
  2. Vascular malformation
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5
Q

Meningiomas of the CPA

A
  • Symptoms really depend upon location, but in the CPA usually involve the vestibulocochlear or facial nerves
  • Will have a dural tail on imaging
  • These tumors are overwhelmingly benign and surgical therapy is curative
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6
Q

Epidermoid tumor of the CPA

A

Benign tumor composed of squamous epithelial elements.

Thought to arise from congenital nests.

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7
Q

Glomus tumor of the CPA

A
  • Aka, a paraganglioma
  • Highly vascular tumors that arise from neuroepithelial cells
  • Named for the tissue/structure they arise from
  • Pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma rule of 10’s:
    • 10% of these tumors produce catecholamines, 20^ are bilatreal, 10% are familial, 10% are malignant
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8
Q

Three options for dealing with a posterior fossa tumor

A
  • Observation and serial imaging
  • Stereotactic radiosurgery
  • Conventional neurosurgery
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9
Q

Outcomes in gamma knife therapy for CPA tumors

A
  • Tumor control rates are very high for benign disease (>90%)
  • Trigeminal and facial nerve preservation rates are >90%
  • However, preservation of unilateral hearing is ~50%
  • If tumor cannot be controlled by stereotactic radiotherapy, this unfortunately makes subsequent conventional neurosurgery in the area more difficult
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10
Q

For which types of tumor is stereotactic radiotherapy not an option?

A

Meningioma

Epidermoid tumor

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11
Q

Drawbacks of stereotactic radiotherapy

A
  • No tissue specimen to confirm the diagnosis
  • Only ~50% preservation rate of hearing
  • If unsuccessful, outcomes are worse than primary neurosurgery alone
  • Cannot be used for meingioma or epidermoid tumor
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12
Q

Stereotactic radiotherapy should never be used for a CPA tumor when . . .

A

. . . the pathologic diagnosis is in doubt

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13
Q

What is the single best test to elucidate the etiology of a unilatreal sensorineural hearing loss?

A

MRI of the internal auditory canal with gadolinium contrast

Unfortunately, it is not entirely specific, but it can shed light on the nature of the pathology.

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14
Q

Evidence suggests that Bell’s palsy is probably due to ___

A

Evidence suggests that Bell’s palsy is probably due to recrudescence of HSV within the facial nerve

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15
Q

By definition, Bell’s palsy is. . .

A

. . . a diagnosis of exclusion

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