Direct cranial nerve involvement by gliomas: Case series and review of the literature

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Abstract

Malignant gliomas are characterized by infiltrative growth of tumor cells, including along white matter tracts. This may result in clinical cranial neuropathy due to direct involvement of a cranial nerve rather than by leptomeningeal spread along cranial nerves. Gliomas directly involving cranial nerves III-XII are rare, with only 11 cases reported in the literature before 2014, including 8 with imaging. We present 8 additional cases demonstrating direct infiltration of a cranial nerve by a glioma. Asymmetric cisternal nerve expansion compared with the contralateral nerve was noted with a mean length of involvement of 9.4 mm. Based on our case series, the key imaging feature for recognizing direct cranial nerve involvement by a glioma is the detection of an intra-axial mass in the pons or midbrain that is directly associated with expansion, signal abnormality, and/or enhancement of the adjacent cranial nerves.

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Mabray, M. C., Glastonbury, C. M., Mamlouk, M. D., Punch, G. E., Solomon, D. A., & Cha, S. (2015). Direct cranial nerve involvement by gliomas: Case series and review of the literature. In American Journal of Neuroradiology (Vol. 36, pp. 1349–1354). American Society of Neuroradiology. https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4287

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