Despite a good cure rate after surgery, the recurrence rate in pituitary adenomas is globally high. The decision making in such cases can be problematic for the nature of the lesion, for the anatomic structures involved, for the different pharmacological, surgical, radiotherapeutic and radiosurgical options nowadays available. In the perspective of an improvement and refinement of the surgical procedure an endoscopic endonasal transsphenoidal approach to the pituitary was recently adopted in the Neurosurgical Department of the University of Naples. Its minimal invasiveness and its wider and direct anatomic control of the operative field has allowed a faster, greater and safer potential of tumour excision, with respect of the sphenoid, sellar and parasellar structures. The authors have examined the advantages provided by this technique in 12 patients with recurrent pituitary adenomas and in 2 craniopharyngiomas already treated via a transnasal transsphenoidal approach (TTA), where the anatomy of surgical field had been distorted by the first operation or the radiation therapy. They conclude that the endoscopic transsphenoidal re-operation might be considered the procedure of choice in case of recurrences and its easiness in such conditions could favour its larger use, before other more aggressive therapeutic solutions.
Spinal subarachnoid spread is not uncommon in brain oligodendrogliomas; on the other hand, symptomatic involvement of the spinal cord and cauda is very rare, with only 16 reported cases. We report the case of a 41-year-old man who underwent resection of a low-grade frontal oligodendroglioma 4 years previously. He was again observed because of bilateral sciatic pain followed by left leg paresis. A spine MRI showed an intramedullary T12-L1 tumor with root enhancement. At operation, an intramedullary anaplastic oligodendroglioma with left exophytic component was found and partially resected. Two weeks later, a large left frontoparietal anaplastic oligodendroglioma was diagnosed and completely resected. The patient was neurologically stable for 8 months and died 1 year after the spinal surgery because of diffuse brain and spinal leptomeningeal spread. The review of the reported cases shows that spinal symptomatic metastases can occur in both low-grade and anaplastic oligodendrogliomas, even many years after surgery of the primary tumor; however, they exceptionally occur as first clinical manifestation or as anaplastic progression. The spinal seeding represents a negative event leading to a short survival.
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