3D Printed Intracranial Space-Occupying Lesion
Clinical History
A 56-year-old woman with 6 months of intermittent headache and vomiting was admitted to
hospital comatose after a grand mal seizure, and failed to regain consciousness.
Pathology
The specimen is a coronal section of a brain. It is evident that the brain has been compressed
laterally and downwards by a right-sided expanding intracranial mass, probably a meningioma. The original mass
is not present. The anterior face shows shift of midline structures with subfalcine herniation* of the cingulate
gyrus. The posterior face (see photo) shows haemorrhage of varying ages within the temporal lobe and the pons,
typical of supratentorial mass lesions. There is also ventricular asymmetry.
*In subfalcine (or cingulate) herniation, the most common type of brain herniation, the innermost part of the frontal lobe is pushed under part of the falx cerebri, between the two hemispheres of the brain.
Further information
Symptoms of a space occupying meningioma in the cranial cavity can be caused by the tumour
mass pressing on the brain, which can lead to atrophy and displacement of brain parenchyma, leading to symptoms
arising from interruptions to cranial nerve functions, blood flow and normal cerebral functions. General
symptoms may include:
Muscle seizures: e.g. Myoclonic (single or multiple muscle twitches, jerks, and/or spasms) or Tonic-clonic (grand
mal: loss of consciousness and body tone, followed by twitching and relaxing muscle contractions, loss of
control of body functions, short period of no breathing and the person may turn a shade of blue, a person may be
sleepy and experience a headache, confusion, weakness, numbness, and sore muscles)
Sensory changes –
alterations in vision, smell, and/or hearing without losing consciousness.
Symptoms and signs may vary with
the location of the tumor.
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