Meningioma

A rare, mostly benign, primary tumor of the meninges (arachnoid cap cells), usually located in the supratentorial compartment, commonly appearing in the sixth and seventh decade of life, clinically silent in most cases or causing hyperostosis close to the tumor and resulting in focal bulging and localized pain in less than 10% of cases. Additional features may include headache, seizures, gradual personality changes (apathy and dementia), anosmia, impaired vision, exophthalmos, hearing loss, ataxia, dysmetria, hypotonia, nystagmus, and rarely spontaneous bleeding.

Alexia

An acquired type of sensory aphasia where damage to the brain leads to the loss of the ability to read.


Total: 3

                      


(per page)
PMID (PMCID)
440550
MALE Middle Aged
Alexia without agraphia in a musician after transcallosal removal of a left intraventricular meningioma.
Levin HS, Rose JE.
Neurosurgery. 1979;4(2):168-74.
After a meningioma situated in the trigone of the left lateral ventricle was excised by the transcallosal approach of Kempe and Blaylock, a right-handed musician with a right hemianopsia developed alexia without agraphia.
440550
MALE Middle Aged
Alexia without agraphia in a musician after transcallosal removal of a left intraventricular meningioma.
Levin HS, Rose JE.
Neurosurgery. 1979;4(2):168-74.
Alexia without agraphia in a musician after transcallosal removal of a left intraventricular meningioma.
195235
FEMALE Middle Aged
Alexia without agraphia, hemianopia, or color-naming defect: a disconnection syndrome.
Vincent FM, Sadowsky CH, Saunders RL, Reeves AG.
Neurology. 1977;27(7):689-91.
A patient with alexia without agraphia, hemianopia, or color-naming defect was found at operation to have a meningioma arising from the tentorium cerebelli that compressed the inferior aspect of the left temporal-occipital junction.