Home | Volume 18 | Article number 100

Original article

Intraventricular glioblastoma

Intra ventricular glioblastoma

 

Cherkaoui Mandour1,&, Brahim El Mostarchid1

 

1Departement of neurosurgery, Military hospital Mohammed V, Rabat, Morocco

 

 

&Corresponding author
Cherkaoui Mandour, Departement of Neurosurgery, Military hospital Mohammed V, Rabat, Morocco

 

 

Image in medicine

Glioblastoma represents 15%-20% of all intracranial tumors and approximately 50 % of gliomas in adults. Although capable of arising anywhere in the central nervous system, these tumors mainly present as a frontotemporal lesion (63%) of the cerebral cortex. But, intraventricular glioblastoma is rare and only few cases have been reported in the literature. We report a case of 40-year-old woman who had a headache, vomiting and visual disturbances that persisted for four weeks. Magnetic resonance imaging showed an intraventricular lesion with inhomogeneous enhancement and infiltrative borders. These characteristics are consistent with other differential diagnoses: carcinomas, ependymomas and choroid plexus papillomas. The patient underwent a stereotactic biopsy allowed the final diagnosis of intra ventricular glioblastoma.

Figure 1: Magnetic resonance imaging showed an intraventricular lesion with inhomogeneous enhancement and infiltrative borders