• Neurosurgery · Jun 2010

    Case Reports

    Endoscopic cauterization of a symptomatic choroid plexus cyst at the foramen of Monro: case report.

    • Andrea J Chamczuk and Walter Grand.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University New York, and Department of Neurosurgery, Millard Fillmore Gates Hospital, Kaleida Health, Buffalo, New York, USA.
    • Neurosurgery. 2010 Jun 1; 66 (6 Suppl Operative): 376-7; discussion 377.

    ObjectiveChoroid plexus cysts are common in the developing fetus, and although often persisting into adulthood, they rarely represent the underlying cause of symptomatic unilateral ventriculomegaly. The case presented here highlights both the diagnostic obscurity and endoscopic management of a choroid plexus cyst in a symptomatic patient.Clinical PresentationThe patient is a 47-year-old white woman who presented with acute exacerbation of debilitating, diffuse, and postural headache, nausea, vomiting, early papilledema, and short-term memory loss. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging revealed an intraventricular mass obstructing the foramen of Monro on the left with ventriculomegaly. Cranial computed tomographic imaging demonstrated unilateral ventricular enlargement.InterventionDuring stereotactic endoscopic exploration, a choroid plexus cyst was evident at the foramen of Monro. Endoscopic cauterization of the cyst resulted in a decrease in the size of the left lateral ventricle, with complete relief of the patient's headaches and resolution of her memory loss. She remained headache free at the time of a 3-year follow-up evaluation after surgery.ConclusionChoroid plexus cysts remain a diagnostic challenge; their presence should be sought out in the face of ventricular asymmetry and symptomatic hydrocephalus. Endoscopic ablation offers a minimally invasive treatment for the management of these lesions.

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