Malignant lymphomatous invasion of Meckel’s cave: pathoanatomical considerations of the petrous apex

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2021-11-11
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American English
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BMJ Publishing
Abstract

Secondary central nervous system lymphoma is rare, occurring in up to 10% of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patients and in 5% of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma patients. The prognosis is poor, even rarer is metastasis of large B-cell lymphomas into Meckel’s cave and the trigeminal nerve roots. We describe a relapsing case of a large B-cell lymphoma that migrated into Meckel’s cave, the mandibular branch of the trigeminal nerve and the adjacent cavernous sinus. We review petrous apex anatomy, review the literature of metastatic spread into Meckel’s cave and analyse existing pathoanatomical studies that explain the conduits and barriers of tumour spread. Understanding this pathoanatomical relationship is critical for neurologists and neurosurgeons alike to effectively correlate patient signs and symptoms to intracranial pathology and identify origins and sites of metastatic dispersion in similar rare clinical scenarios.

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Marotta DA, Mason M, Cohen-Gadol A, Kesserwani H. Malignant lymphomatous invasion of Meckel's cave: pathoanatomical considerations of the petrous apex. BMJ Case Rep. 2021;14(11):e244512. Published 2021 Nov 11. doi:10.1136/bcr-2021-244512
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