A case of metastatic choriocarcinoma associated with cerebral thrombosis and aneurysmal formation

A rare case of metastatic choriocarcinoma with cerebral thrombosis and subsequent neoplastic aneurysm formation and rupture is reported. Three months after normal pregnancy and normal delivery, a 16-year-old woman was admitted with the chief complaints of speech disturbance and paresthesia of her ri...

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Published inNō shinkei geka Vol. 24; no. 5; p. 463
Main Authors Komeichi, T, Igarashi, K, Takigami, M, Saito, K, Isu, T, Itamoto, K, Saito, T, Imaizumi, T
Format Journal Article
LanguageJapanese
Published Japan 01.05.1996
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Summary:A rare case of metastatic choriocarcinoma with cerebral thrombosis and subsequent neoplastic aneurysm formation and rupture is reported. Three months after normal pregnancy and normal delivery, a 16-year-old woman was admitted with the chief complaints of speech disturbance and paresthesia of her right upper extremity on June 4, 1992. Both CT and MRI demonstrated cerebral infarction in the left insula. A cerebral angiogram revealed that the left middle cerebral artery (about 2 mm in diameter) was occluded in the distal M2 segment. On the 34th day, a follow up angiogram demonstrated a fusiform aneurysm at the same point of the arterial occlusion that had been already recanalized. On the 37th day, she suddenly had severe headaches and consciousness disturbance. CT showed subarachnoid hemorrhage. Resection of the aneurysm and left STA-MCA anastomosis were performed. Histological examination revealed that the aneurysmal walls were invaded by choriocarcinoma. On the 60th day, she was transferŕed to the department of obstetrics and gynecology for chemotherapy. On the 65th day and the 71st day, the patient suffered from intracerebral hemorrhage in the left basal ganglia, which originated from a different point of aneurysmectomy. She died because of the rapid growth of liver metastases 7 months after initial admission. Because chest CT and roentgenogram detected no lesion in the lungs, neoplastic embolus was unlikely as a cause of occlusion of the cerebral artery of about 2 mm in diameter. It would be more reasonable to believe that choriocarcinoma metastasized to the cerebral arterial walls initially and formed a thrombus which occluded the artery. As the neoplastic invasion weakened the arterial wall, a fusiform aneurysm was formed when the vessel was recanalized. There has been no case reported in the literature of neoplastic aneurysms of choriocarcinoma in which the course from aneurysmal formation to rupture was followed angiographically.
ISSN:0301-2603