Spontaneous Regression Of A Large Skull Base Meningioma: Case Report.
Kumaria, A., Ingale, H. A., & MacARThur, D. C. (2020). spontaneous regression of a large skull base meningioma: case report. British journal of neurosurgery, 34(2), 205–206. https://doi.org/10.1080/02688697.2018.1426728
View Original Source →Abstract
We present the case of a 58 year old lady with a large middle cranial fossa meningioma (5 cm × 4 cm in maximal dimensions) which has considerably regressed without any treatment during seven years of follow up. While the tumour had remained radiologically static for the first three years, scans from year five post-diagnosis onwards have shown shrinkage of the meningioma from a calculated volume of 36 cm3 to 11.2 cm3. There has been no intratumoral haemorrhage or infarction and no medication or exogenous hormonal effect that could account for this effect. We reviewed the literature and report that this is only the second ever case of spontaneous regression of meningioma.
Case Details
Disease Location
Middle cranial fossa
Personal Characteristics
51-year-old female with learning disability, anxiety, dm, obesity
Clinical Characteristics
A 51-year-old female with a two year history of buzzing tinnitus in her left ear and mild left ear and jaw pain. No visual deficits and no oph-
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Not discussed