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Review
. 1999 Mar;44(3):648-54; discussion 654-5.
doi: 10.1097/00006123-199903000-00119.

Intraventricular cavernomas: three cases and review of the literature

Affiliations
Review

Intraventricular cavernomas: three cases and review of the literature

N Reyns et al. Neurosurgery. 1999 Mar.

Abstract

Objective and importance: Cavernomas occur very rarely in the ventricular system. We report three cases of intraventricular cavernomas and review the literature.

Clinical presentation: A 16-year-old female patient presented with a sudden distal deficit of the left superior limb. She had a voluminous tumor involving the two lateral ventricles, with radiological evidence of recent hemorrhage. A 30-year-old man presented with generalized seizures and a right hemiplegia related to a 4-cm-diameter cavernoma in the two lateral ventricles involving the interhemispheric scissure through the corpus callosum and left centrum ovale. The radiological appearance was not typical and did not allow the diagnosis. A 42-year-old man had a cavernoma in the third ventricle, which was responsible for his short-term memory loss. This cavernoma had been revealed by computed tomography that was performed after intracerebral hemorrhage related to another cavernoma in the right parietal lobe occurred.

Intervention: Stereotactic biopsies allowed the diagnosis of intraventricular cavernoma in the first case. Surgical removal via a right transcortical transventricular approach and a transcallosal approach in the first and second cases, respectively, was complete, resulting in good outcomes. Surgical removal via a right transcortical transventricular approach in the third case was partial.

Conclusion: Intraventricular cavernomas are so uncommon that only 42 well-documented cases have been previously reported in the literature. It seems that their radiological diagnosis may be difficult because of their uncommon location in the ventricular system and their voluminous size. A wrong preoperative diagnosis has sometimes been the cause of inefficient therapy, such as radiotherapy, for these surgically curable benign lesions.

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