Adamek D, Korzeniowska A, Morga R, Lopatka P, Jeleńska-Szyguła I, Danilewicz B
Department of Neuropathology, Institute of Neurology, Jagiellonian University, Medical College, Kraków, Poland.
Folia Neuropathol. 2001;39(2):111-7.
Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumour (DNT) is a rare low-grade, mixed neuronal and glial tumour, usually associated with pharmacologically intractable, complex partial or generalised seizures which date from childhood. The prognosis after surgery is favourable. We present a classic case of DNT occurring in an 18-year-old male, who presented simple partial seizures without signs of raised intracranial pressure. CT and MR demonstrated focal mass located in the right temporal lobe. Histologically there were found the features of a typical DNT architecture with mixed cellular composition. The response to surgery was excellent. The tumour has not recurred, and the control of seizures remained good. Immunostaining for glutamate receptor GluR-2 showed stronger immunopositivity in neurones dispersed within the tumour and especially in margins of lesion as compared with apparently normal cerebral cortex. The expression of both excitatoryamino acid transporterproteins EAAT1 and EAAT2 was weaker then in normal cortex and uneven. This perhaps may explain the mechanism of seizures (elevated glutaminergic stimulation), and may suggest the excitotoxic damage of neurones.