A 5-year-old girl was admitted with complaints of headache, dizziness, imbalance in walking, and impaired vision for 1 month. Her neurological examination revealed a tendency to sleep, anisocoric pupillae, mesh eye pupil, dilated lateral gaze paralysis, and left hemiparasia (4/5 muscle strength). In magnetic resonance imaging, a mass was observed in the pineal region that infiltrates the right thalamus and right superior peduncle, isointense and hyperintense in T1 sections, hyperintense in T2 sections, having centrally contrasted areas in post-contrast sections. Due to the presence of evident hydrocephalus, a ventricular shunt was inserted and then through supracerebellar to infratentorial approach the lesion was removed subtotally. The histopathological diagnosis was GBM. GBMs in the pineal region are extremely rare tumors carrying poor prognosis. The patients are generally presented with the signs and symptoms of increased intracranial pressure. GBMs should be kept in mind in differential diagnosis of tumors in the pineal region.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- case report
- long non coding rna
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- sleep quality
- magnetic resonance
- heart failure
- computed tomography
- peritoneal dialysis
- contrast enhanced
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cerebrospinal fluid
- early life
- deep brain stimulation
- blood brain barrier
- depressive symptoms
- lower limb
- cerebral ischemia
- optical coherence tomography
- optic nerve