“…It typically affects older men, with onset between the fourth and sixth decades of life and a male/female ratio of 1.8/1, although some cases of infantile gliosarcoma have also been described. 5 It is normally located in the supratentorial region with a slight preference for the temporal lobes, 6 although it can also affect the frontal, parietal and occipital lobes. 7 In some cases, metastatic extraneural dissemination has been described to occur via the blood to lung, bone and lymphatic ganglion tissues, as well as intraaxial, brainstem and spinal cord dissemination.…”