پديد آورندگان :
Zali Alireza نويسنده , Shahzadi Sohrab نويسنده , Mohammad-Mohammadi Alireza نويسنده , Taherzadeh Karim نويسنده , Parsa Khosro نويسنده
چكيده لاتين :
Background: Cerebral lymphoma is a rare non-Hodgkinיs lymphoma, which involves the brain
primarily or after systemic involvement. Because of its infiltrating nature and its sensitivity to
radio- and chemotherapy, surgical removal has a limited role in its treatment and only a
stereotactic biopsy is necessary for confirming the diagnosis.
Methods: The data from all cases in whom the cerebral lymphomas were pathologically
confirmed and were admitted to the Neurosurgery Department of Shohada Hospital for stereotactic
biopsy during a 15-year period were analyzed retrospectively.
Results: The male to female ratio was 1.3:1 and the mean age was 51.7 years. Sixty-seven
percent of the patients had multiple lesions and the remainder had solitary lesions. The most
common site of involvement in patients with multiple lesions was diencephalon and in patients
with solitary lesions was frontal lobe. The mean duration from symptom presentation to
stereotactic biopsy was three months. Systemic lymphoma was detected in nine patients and three
patients had a history of immunosuppressive drug consumption. The most common presenting
symptom was headache in 42% and the most common sign was paresis in 59% of the patients.
In 53 patients, follow-up was performed by phone call. Of these, seven cases had died without
treatment in an average of 40 days after diagnosis, 28 patients died despite adjuvant treatment in
an average of 8.5 months, and 18 cases were alive by the time of last follow-up with average of 17
months. Overall survival of the treated group was 12 months.
Conclusion: There was no mortality related to stereotactic biopsies in these patients.