Neuropathology Flashcards

1
Q

what is a neoplasm

A

abnormal and excessive growth of tissue

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2
Q

general principles of neoplasia
benign vs malignant

A

rare metastasis is rare
- treatment of choice neurosurgery so good

malignant is invasive but rarely metastatic

benign is not invasive but grows in a limited space therefore compress brain and symptomatic, raised ICP
- so can’t be left

non-metastatic effects– maybe a tumour from somewhere else but present in a different way

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3
Q

what are common primary tumours in the brain

what are the effects

A

breast
lung
melanoma

kidney
gut

lymphoma/leukaemia
ovarian

any tumour can metastasise to the brain

may have no effects (picked up if have lung cancer then have NCS findings)
space occupying lesions
-fits
-visual disturbance (occipital)
-drowsiness (frontal)
-behavioural change
haemorrhage

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4
Q

what is the commonest cancer type that gets to the brain

A

SMALL CELL UNDIFFERENTIATED
highly aggressive

also
squamous
adeno

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5
Q

what is meningioma

A

intracranial primary neoplasm
usually benign- (not invasive)
rise from meninges of the brain- at sites of ARACHNOID
pushes- EROSIVE and COMPRESSIVE
fits, drowsiness, headaches
surgical removal
slowly growing – personality changes, chronic history of headaches

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6
Q

what can cause meningiomas

A

sporadic
genetic syndrome- NF2 (neurofibromatosis type 2)
post-irradiation

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7
Q

what are neural tumours
why are they more common in children

A

children still producing neurons
in adult neuron population is permanent/ no proliferation
stem cells being activated is limited

GLIAL CELLS TUMOURS

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8
Q

name some gliomas

A

astrocytomas
oligodendroglioma
ependymoma
choroid plexus tumours
medulloblastoma and PNET

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9
Q

what is important about gliomas

A

never benign
sometimes low grade malignancy
always have a degree of invasion

but on a SPECTRUM

not an old person disease

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10
Q

What is glioma grading (WHO)

A

I LOCALISED
(can see margins and so easy to remove)

II DIFFUSE

III ANAPLASTIC ASTROCYTOMA
(high differentiation)

IV GLIOBLASTOMA MULTIFORME
(v aggressive- haemorrhagic)

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11
Q

what PNET / medulloblastoma

A

PRIMITIVE NEUROECTODERMAL TUMOURS

neuroectoderm origin
highly aggressive
tend to be in children
often in cerebellum (balance problems)
present acutely

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12
Q

why is molecular genetic testing important

A

good at determining if high or low grade
see if some treatments will work (depending on what gene affected)
classify
genetic changes help predict which treatment you should be using to give to patient

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13
Q

what are the commonest type of gliomas

A

astrocytomas

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14
Q

what is acoustic Schwannoma

A

most common type in the brain
arise from Schwann cells
acoustic neuroma (intercranial peripheral nerve tumour)
can cause deafness
grow on acoustic nerve CNVIII

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15
Q

what is SCHWANNOMA

A

arise from myelinating Schwann cells
push out and can compress nerve trunk
can cleave out

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16
Q

what is NEUROFIBROMA

A

non-myelinating Schwann cell
multiclonal pattern BETWEEN THE AXONS so cant cleave out
still benign

17
Q

what is NEUROFIBROMATOSIS 1

A

multiple neurofibromas
associated with inherited genetic disorder
AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
50% spontaneous

CAFE AU LAIT spot

internal nerves and painful from nerve compression

18
Q

what is NEUROFIBROMATOSIS 2

A

MISME Multiple Inherited Schwannomas Meningiomas and Ependymomas

Merlin NF2

bilateral acoustic schwannomas

problem is management
-cant just cut out as so man

cause pain and disfigurement
chemo wont work as not malignant

radio may convert into sarcoma (induce further mutations)

19
Q

what are peripheral nerve tumours

A

schwannoma (separate to nerve trunk)
neurofibroma (mixed in with nerve fibers)

neuroblastoma
ganglioneuroma