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Information

 Nervous System Disorders

= in majority benign slow-growing neoplasm of mature well-differentiated ependymal cells lining the ventricles

Incidence: most common in children; 5–9% of all primary CNS neoplasms; 15% of posterior fossa tumors in children; 63% of spinal intramedullary gliomas

Histo: benign aggregates of ependymocytes in form of perivascular pseudorosettes; may have papillary pattern (difficult DDx to choroid plexus papilloma)

Age:

  1. supratentorial: at any age (atrium / foramen of Monro)
  2. posterior fossa: age peaks at 5 + 34 years; M÷F = 0.8÷1

Associated with: neurofibromatosis

Location:

  1. infratentorial: floor of 4th ventricle (70% of all intracranial ependymomas)
  2. conus medullaris: 40–65% of all spinal intramedullary gliomas
  3. supratentorial: in frontal >parietal >temporoparietal juxtaventricular region (uncommonly intraventricular), lateral ventricle, 3rd ventricle

in children: infratentorial÷supratentorial = 7÷3

CT:

MR:

Cx: subarachnoid dissemination via CSF (rare) (DDx: malignant ependymoma, ependymoblastoma)

Rx: surgery (difficult to resect due to adherence to surrounding brain) + radiation (partially radiosensitive) + chemotherapy

DDx of cerebellar ependymoma:

  1. Astrocytoma (hypodense, displaces 4th ventricle from midline, cystic lucency, intramedullary)
  2. Medulloblastoma (hyperdense, calcifications in only 10%)
  3. Trapped 4th ventricle (no contrast enhancement)