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Glioma - Low Grade - Case 4

A 33 year-old man developed headaches and a depressed affect.

Outline the Tumor

Low Grade Glioma. (Left) T2-weighted axial MRI; (Right) Flair axial MRI. Note the lesion in the left frontal lobe anterior to the precentral sulcus in the superior frontal gyrus. This lesion did not enhance with gadolinium. Also note that there is very little mass effect. This is a low grade glioma (astrocytoma).

Low-grade gliomas make up 15% of all primary intracranial brain tumors, and usually occur in young adults. They are named according to the specific type of glial cell that they derive from, and include astrocytomas, oligodendrogliomas, ependymomas, and mixed gliomas such as oligoastrocytomas that contain a mixture of different types of glial cells. Although biopsy is required to make a definitive diagnosis, the lack of contrast enhancement favors the diagnosis of a low grade glioma rather than a glioblastoma. Certain genetic conditions are predisposed to the formation of gliomas (e.g., neurofibromatosis, tuberous sclerosis). Clinical signs and symptoms depend on location. Headache and focal (or focal to generalized) seizures are common. Focal neurological deficits can occur.

The World Health Organization scheme for grading gliomas from benign to progressively more malignant is as follows:

● Grade I - Pilocytic
● Grade II - Low-grade
● Grade III - Anaplastic
● Grade IV - Glioblastoma multiforme

Pilocytic tumors are very benign histologically and typically occur in children. Low-grade tumors can be slow growing and controlled by surgical resection. If they recur, they are usually higher grade tumors. Anaplastic tumors are malignant tumors with mitoses and nuclear atypia.


Revised 11/30/06.
Copyrighted 2006. David C Preston