The first case of an intracranial plasma cell granuloma is presented. An associated polyclonal gammopathy was another remarkable feature. Routine and special stains of histologic sections as well as electron microscopy characterized such lesions. Immunofluorescent studies revealed a heterogeneous population of plasma cells. When the granuloma was removed, the polyclonal gammopathy resolved, and neither have recurred with eight months of follow-up. It is suggested that prior reports of meningiomas with conspicuous plasma cell-lymphocytic components may in reality be plasma cell granulomas and could be differentiated by electron microscopy.
In a clinicopathologic review of 126 autopsied cases with prostate cancer, 14 demonstrated intracranial metastases. Only two of nine symptomatic patients were evaluated for suspected central nervous system metastases prior to death, and five asymptomatic patients were incidentally found to have metastases at autopsy. Intracranial metastases in prostate cancer occur in the setting of widespread disease, and tissue pathology may reveal moderately to poorly differentiated tumor (11 of 14 cases).
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