Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) poses a minimal but important risk for tumour transformation, typically occurring 8-10 years after the treatment. Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumour (MPNST) is the most common tumour arising from a vestibular schwannoma treated with SRS, with only 14 cases previously reported. We present the fifteenth case and describe its evolution and clinical course.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 58-year-old female with an eight-year history of rhinorrhea and a two-day history of subjective fever, chills, and vomiting presented to the emergency department for neurosurgical evaluation. Brain MRI demonstrated herniation of the meninges and portions of the inferomedial right temporal lobe through a defect of the lateral wall of the right sphenoid sinus, extending to the sphenoethmoidal recess and posterior right ethmoid air cells. A right pterional craniotomy was performed where the herniated part of the right temporal lobe, and its associated meninges, were excised.
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