Nager G T, Heroy J, Hoeplinger M
Am J Otolaryngol. 1983 Sep-Oct;4(5):297-324. doi: 10.1016/s0196-0709(83)80018-0.
Meningiomas are the second largest group of brain tumors after gliomas. They account for 13 to 18 per cent of all primary intracranial neoplasms. The majority occur in the cerebral chamber; only 8 to 9 per cent are located in the cerebellar chamber. Meningiomas are hamartomatous, not truly neoplastic tumors, which arise from dural fibroblasts and particularly from arachnoid cells that tend to cluster around the tips of the arachnoid villi. Their preferential sites correspond closely with the locations where arachnoid villi are most frequently encountered, namely, along the major venous sinuses and their contributory veins, at the foramina of exit of the cranial nerves, and where arachnoid cell clusters are found within the trunk or the perineural sheaths of cranial nerves within or adjacent to the basal foramina. Of all intracranial meningiomas, 20 per cent eventually develop an extracranial extension. These extracranial extensions project, in order of decreasing frequency, to 1) the orbit, 2) the external table of the calvaria, 3) the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses, and 4) the parapharyngeal (cervical) space. Once a meningioma has gained access to the temporal bone, its tendency to extend beyond the confinements of the skull increases to 43 per cent. The most frequent pathway is through the jugular and lacerate foramina into the parapharyngeal space, where it may manifest as a nasopharyngeal, oropharyngeal, retromaxillary, retromandibular, or cervical neck mass. A meningioma in the parapharyngeal area can represent 1) an extracranial extension of a primary intracranial tumor, 2) a neoplasm arising in the jugular foramen, 3) a neoplasm originating from an arachnoid cell cluster within the trunk of a cranial nerve or its perineural sheaths within or near a neural foramen, or 4) a metastasis to a cervical lymph node from a primary intracranial meningioma. Meningiomas extending to the neck are unique because of their tendency toward extracranial expansion, higher incidence of local recurrence, multicentric growth, and frequent combination with other neoplasms of the central nervous system. They are frequently an expression of the central form of neurofibromatosis (von Recklinghausen's disease).
脑膜瘤是仅次于胶质瘤的第二大脑部肿瘤组。它们占所有原发性颅内肿瘤的13%至18%。大多数发生在脑室;只有8%至9%位于小脑室。脑膜瘤是错构瘤,并非真正的肿瘤,由硬脑膜成纤维细胞,特别是蛛网膜细胞产生,这些细胞往往聚集在蛛网膜绒毛尖端周围。它们的好发部位与蛛网膜绒毛最常出现的位置密切相关,即沿着主要静脉窦及其分支静脉、在颅神经出口孔处,以及在颅底孔内或附近的颅神经主干或神经鞘膜内发现蛛网膜细胞簇的地方。在所有颅内脑膜瘤中,20%最终会发生颅外扩展。这些颅外扩展按频率递减顺序依次延伸至:1)眼眶,2)颅骨外板,3)鼻腔和鼻窦,4)咽旁(颈部)间隙。一旦脑膜瘤侵犯颞骨,其超出颅骨范围的扩展倾向增加到43%。最常见的途径是通过颈静脉孔和破裂孔进入咽旁间隙,在那里它可能表现为鼻咽部、口咽部、上颌后、下颌后或颈部肿块。咽旁区的脑膜瘤可能代表:1)原发性颅内肿瘤的颅外扩展,2)起源于颈静脉孔的肿瘤,3)起源于颅神经主干或其在神经孔内或附近的神经鞘膜内的蛛网膜细胞簇的肿瘤,或4)原发性颅内脑膜瘤转移至颈部淋巴结。延伸至颈部的脑膜瘤具有独特性,因为它们有颅外扩展的倾向、局部复发率较高、多中心生长,且常与中枢神经系统的其他肿瘤合并。它们常是神经纤维瘤病(冯·雷克林豪森病)中枢型的一种表现。