Unusual case of intraosseous primary intracranial malignant melanoma.
Brando GuarreraIrene CoatiMario GiarlettaPublished in: BMJ case reports (2024)
Primary intracranial malignant melanoma (PIMM) represents 0.07% of central nervous system tumours; clinical behaviour and prognosis are not well documented. Preoperative diagnosis of PIMM is complex and it could be easily misdiagnosed, especially with malignant meningioma.We are reporting a case of a man with a history of rapidly arising motor slowing associated with urinary incontinence, presenting with mild convergent strabismus caused by paralysis in abduction in the right eye. A brain CT showed a lesion compatible with malignant spheno-orbital meningioma, and the patient underwent gross total resection. Intraoperatively, the blackish lesion infiltrated and eroded the bone; it was placed externally on the dura mater with a mild reaction and without attachment. Histological examination confirmed PIMM.Intraosseous localisation of PIMM has been observed in the basic bone structure of the oral cavity. We report the first intraosseous spheno-orbital PIMM case and present an embryological theory about how this unusual tumour can develop.
Keyphrases
- optic nerve
- urinary incontinence
- bone mineral density
- case report
- computed tomography
- soft tissue
- patients undergoing
- bone regeneration
- white matter
- emergency department
- resting state
- image quality
- positron emission tomography
- multiple sclerosis
- postmenopausal women
- children with cerebral palsy
- blood brain barrier
- cerebral ischemia