Title of article :
Progressive visual and hearing loss as looming manifestations of spinal meningeal melanocytoma
Author/Authors :
Haghi-Ashtiani, Bahram Dept. of Neurology - Rasoul Akram Hospital - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Sina, Farzad Dept. of Neurology - Rasoul Akram Hospital - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Ben-Isa, Fowzieh Dept. of Neurology - Rasoul Akram Hospital - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Rohani, Mohammad Dept. of Neurology - Rasoul Akram Hospital - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Meningeal melanocytoma is a rare tumor of nervous system, which originates from leptomeningeal
melanocytes. The locations of melanocytoma in the nervous system are most
frequently in the posterior fossa or along the spinal cord, and usually appear as an extra-axial
mass. The manifestations of tumor are most often due to its compressing effect on adjacent
nervous structures that causes various neurological signs and symptoms depending on its locations.
It may also cause superficial siderosis of the central nervous system [1]. In this case
we describe another manifestation of this tumor which raised intracranial pressure and developed
its neurological signs and symptoms. The patient was a 33-year old man with a two-year
history of headache and tinnitus, transient diplopia, and had also a three- month history of
progressive bilateral visual and hearing loss. The medical investigations of the patient reveal
raised intracranial pressure (RICP) with a high concentration of protein in the cerebrospinal
fluid, and an extra-axial mass at the T11-12 level in magnetic resonance imaging of the spinal
cord. The patient underwent surgical removal of the tumor, in which the pathological study
characterized the tumor as a meningeal melanocytoma. After surgery the CSF pressure returned
to normal state, and its protein level decreased. The patient's hearing loss improved
significantly but the visual defect did not change.
Base on various causes of the RICP, especially when there is abnormality in CSF protein
without any known cause, we must consider melanocytoma as a treatable cause, and thus in
such patients, performing spinal cord magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a valuble technique
for diagnosis as well as investigation.
Keywords :
raised intracranial pressure , spinal tumor , melanocytoma
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics