Unusual Evolution and Computerized Tomographic Appearance
of a Gliosarcoma
Mark C. Preul, Jose A. Espinosa, Donatella Tampieri and Stirling
Carpenter

Abstract:
A patient with a remote infarct, seizures, mild hemiparesis,
and dysphasia became obtunded over four months and died. Computerized
tomography (CT) over 5 years showed a consistent, large, wedge-shaped
left hemisphere hypodensity with a central calcification, but
without signs of mass effect. This was interpreted as an infarct
of the left middle cerebral artery territory. Post-mortem examination
of the brain revealed the entire area appearing as infarct on
CT was a gliosarcoma. We suspect that the unusual CT appearance
of the lesion was likely caused by multiple pathologies: a low
grade glioma transforming into a gliosarcoma that was able to
spread throughout the area of infarct encephalomalacia without
revealing a typical CT appearance of mass effect. The patient's
brief period of deterioration probably coincided with transformation
of the tumor into a gliosarcoma. The variable CT characteristics
of gliosarcomas are reviewed.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1994; 21: 141-145
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