Cerebellopontine Angle Mass Flashcards
The combination of __ and __ is suggestive of a cerebellopontine mass
The combination of hearing loss and facial paralysis is suggestive of a cerebellopontine mass
Acoustic neuroma / Vestibulocochlear schwannoma
- 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.
Cerebellopontine angle
The angle between the cerebellum pons, and temporal lobe
This space contains cranial nerves V through XI
Two most common cerebellopontine angle masses
- Acoustic neuroma / Vestibulocochlear schwannoma
- Vascular malformation
Meningiomas of the CPA
- 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
Epidermoid tumor of the CPA
Benign tumor composed of squamous epithelial elements.
Thought to arise from congenital nests.
Glomus tumor of the CPA
- Aka, a paraganglioma
- Highly vascular tumors that arise from neuroepithelial cells
- Named for the tissue/structure they arise from
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Pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma rule of 10’s:
- 10% of these tumors produce catecholamines, 20^ are bilatreal, 10% are familial, 10% are malignant
Three options for dealing with a posterior fossa tumor
- Observation and serial imaging
- Stereotactic radiosurgery
- Conventional neurosurgery
Outcomes in gamma knife therapy for CPA tumors
- 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
For which types of tumor is stereotactic radiotherapy not an option?
Meningioma
Epidermoid tumor
Drawbacks of stereotactic radiotherapy
- 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
Stereotactic radiotherapy should never be used for a CPA tumor when . . .
. . . the pathologic diagnosis is in doubt
What is the single best test to elucidate the etiology of a unilatreal sensorineural hearing loss?
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.
Evidence suggests that Bell’s palsy is probably due to ___
Evidence suggests that Bell’s palsy is probably due to recrudescence of HSV within the facial nerve
By definition, Bell’s palsy is. . .
. . . a diagnosis of exclusion