Title: The nervous system
1The nervous system
2Major differences
- between nervous system and other organ
systems of the human body - 1. Topographic localization - specific areas
(cerebral centers) - even small focal lesion may
cause selective severe dysfunction - variable
neurologic deficits (dependent on location) -
e.g. frontal cortex spinal cord - 2. Protective mechanism
- - skull - protection from trauma vulnerability
to intracerebral expansions, edema, etc. - - CSF - protection can cause hydrocephalus
3- 3. Limited spectrum of pathologic responses to
injury - e.g. glial response is similar in
various lesions (infarction, trauma,
degeneration) - 4. Specific diseases - majority of pathologic
processes are similar to other organs
(infections, ischemia, etc.) - some disorders are
specific to neural tissue (e.g. neurodegenerative
processes)
4Cells of nervous system and their behaviour in
pathologic processes
- Neurons
- heterogenous family
- no postembryonic multiplication or regeneration
- most common - necrosis (nucleus - pyknosis,
karyorrhexis, karyolysis cytoplasm -
chromatolysistigrolysis (loss of Nissl
substance) - - infections (intraplasmatic inclusions)
5- Astrocytes
- major supporting cell type
- in an injury - gemistocytic astrocytes (Gr.
gemistosfull) - production of dense network of
cellular processes (analogous to fibrous scar) -
no collagen! - glial scar - Rosenthal fibres - eosinophillic
intracytoplasmatic refractile fibres - reaction
to slowly growing expansile lesions - corpora amylacea - accumulation of glycoproteins
in cell processes - sign of aging
6- Oligodendrocytes
- satelite cells around neurons - processes wrap
around axons - myelin lymphocyte-like nuclei - loss of myelin in acquired demyelinating
disorders (e.g. multiple sclerosis) - Ependymal cells
- lining of ventricles - closely related to
chorioidal cells - loss of e. cells - proliferation of supependymal
glial cells - ependymal granulations - infections - CMV - viral inclusions
7- Microglia
- derived from circulating monocytes
- most important phagocytic cells in CNS
- phagocytosis of lipids - gitter cells elongation
of nuclei - rod cells in viral infections -
accumulation - microglial nodules
8Edema, herniation and hydrocephalus
- rigid compartment (skull, vertebral column, dura
mater) - brain parenchyma (P), blood (B), CSF (C)
- PBCconstant
9Cerebral edema
- more appropriately brain parenchymal edema
- vasogenic
- disruption of integrity of the blood-brain
barrier - escape of fluid from vasculature into
interstitial space (interstitial edema) - no lymphatic vessels! - no drainage!
- localized (periphery of abscesses or tumors) or
generalized - cytotoxic
- intracellular edema - due to cellular injury -
e.g. hypoxia-ischemia
10- Clinically
- headache, edema of N.II. papilae, vertigo,
vomiting, coma, death - Grossly
- increased weight (1500 g)
- brain overfills cranial cavity, gyri are
flattened, sulci are narrowed, ventricles
compressed - herniation occurs
11Herniation
- increased intracranial pressure - brain is "too
large" for the cranial cavity - type of herniation depends on location of
expansion
121. Transtentorial (uncinate) herniation
- medial aspect of temporal lobe is compressed
against the free margin of tentorium cerebelli - N.III. is compressed - ocular manifestation
- posterior cerebral artery is compressed -
secondary ischemic injury (visual cortex)
132. Subfalcine (cingulate) herniation
- unilateral asymmetric expansion within cerebral
hemisphere - displacement of cingulate gyrus under the falx
cerebri - compression of branches of anterior cerebral
artery
143. Tonsillar herniation
- displacement of cerebellar tonsils through the
foramen magnum - life threatening - brain stem compression,
compromises vital respiratory centers - hemorrhagic lesions in the midbrain (secondary
brain stem (Duret's) hemorrhages)
15Hydrocephalus
- CSF produced by choroid plexus - circulation
(foramina Luschka and Magendie) - absorption by
arachnoid granulations - hydrocephalus accumulation of excessive CSF
within ventricular system - decreased resorption (majority of cases) or
overproduction - noncommunicating h. - obstruction of the flow of
CSF within the ventricles (tumors of aqueductus
Sylvii, postmeningitic stenosis) - communicating h. - obstruction of the flow of CSF
in subarachnoid space or in granulations
16- before closure of cranial sutures - enlargement
of the head, increase of head circumference - after closure of cranial sutures - enlargement of
the ventricles, increased intracranial pressure - h. ex vacuo dilatation of the ventricular
system (secondarily) due to loss of brain
parenchyma - compensation flow of CSF remains
normal
17Vascular diseases
- normally - 15-20 of cardiac output - very
sophisticated system of autoregulation of
perfusion - ischemia - irreversible parenchymal injury within
brief period (5 min) - vascular insults - 3rd most common cause of death
(USA) - global hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy
- infarcts
- hemorrhages
18Global hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy
- brain is sufficiently perfused even in severe
hypotension (50 mm Hg systolic) - hypoxiadecrease in the O2 ischemiadecrease of
tissue perfusion - most susceptible - neurons (namely pyramidal
cells of hippocampus, Purkinje cells of
cerebellum) - high risk areas at junctions of arterial
territories (watershed areas)
19- morphology - depends on severity of ischemia and
duration from injury - first changes visible only after 12-24 hrs.
(patient must survive this period!) - Grossly edema, softening, irregular
discoloration, areas of hemorrhage, laminar
cortical necrosis - later on - patient maintained on respiratory
support - brain death - body survives, in brain
progression of necrosis - "respirator brain" -
swollen, dusky and soft - fate of the patient depends on degree of ischemia
(only confusion - coma - loss of cortical
functions - death)
20- Micro neuronal shrinkage or swelling,
eosinophilia, nuclear pyknosis in neuropil -
perivascular and pericellular empty spaces (sign
of edema) - later stages - cleaning of necrosis (gitter
cells), perifocal gliosis - postmalatic pseudocyst
21Infarcts
- local circulatory disturbances
- most common form of cerebral vascular disease
(80 of "strokes") - 7th decade, MgtF
- arterial occlusion causes
- atherosclerosis thrombosis - most comm. int.
carot. a., basilar a. - embolism (from heart endocarditis, atrial
thrombi, proximal segment of carotid a.,
paradoxic thrombembolism f. ovale) - most
common target intracerebral blood vessels
(middle cerebral a.)
22- Extent, distribution and clinical symptoms
influenced by - site of arterial occlusion
- time span of development
- presence of anastomoses (circle of Willis)
- systemic perfusion pressure
- Grossly (irrespective of causes and location)
- first changes after 6-12 hrs - softening, pale
discoloration, blurring of borders - full blown appearance - 2-3 days - liquefaction -
malacia sharper demarcation - after 1Mo - cavitation (postmalatic pseudocyst)
23- Clinical symptoms
- sudden onset, preceded by transient episodes of
neurologic dysfunctions - Transient Ischemic
Attacks (TIAs) - important predictor of stroke - 1/3 of patients with TIAs develops infarcts
- symptoms caused by infarct itself, perifocal
edema, herniation - contralateral hemiparesis spasticity
- loss of sensation, visual field abnormalities
- speech abnormalities (aphasias) - if dominant
hemisphere is involved - small infarcts in basal ganglia - slowly
progressing symptomatology - status lacunaris, status cribrosus
24Intracranial hemorrhages
- epidural
- subdural
- subarachnoid
- intraparenchymal
25Epidural hematoma
- rupture of meningeal artery (skull fracture)
- middle mening. a.
- expansion - compression of brain herniation
- rapid progression - immediate surgical drainage!
- lucid interval between trauma and progressive
loss of consciousness
26Subdural hematoma
- disruption of bridging veins (brain-dural
sinuses) - rapid change of head velocity (blows to the head,
violent shaking) - mainly at cerebral convexities
- acute - slowly progressing - clotted blood
- chronic - in atrophic brains - no acute symptoms
- decomposition of blood - osmotic enlargement -
slowly progressive neurological symptoms - confused clinically with dementia, Alzheimer's
disease
27Subarachnoid hemorrhage
- less frequent than intraparenchymal hemorrhage
- not associated with trauma
- most common cause - rupture of saccular (berry)
aneurysm, less commonly A-V malformation - 1 of population (more common in certain
disorders - polycystic kidney disease,
coarctation of aorta, A-V malformations of the
brain) - more frequent in arterial hypertension
28Saccular (berry) aneurysm
- location - bifurcation of branches of internal c.
a. - defect of elastic lamina - multiple in 25 of pts.
- size mm-cm
- highest risk of rupture 4-7 mm (beyond this
size likelihood of rupture decreases) - larger aneurysms - mass effect
- subarachnoid bleeding - usually not massive -
leakage! - arterial spasms - infarcts (40) - 4.-9. day
29Clinical features
- FgtM, lt50's
- increased pressure (lifting heavy things,
defecation) - abrupt onset, headache, nausea, vertigo, coma
- bloody CSF, meningeal signs (neck rigidity)
- 50 acute mortality
- tendency to recurrence
30Combined intraparenchymal and subarachnoid
hemorrhage
- A-V malformationsclumps of vessels
- arteriesveins
- intrahemispheric or on the surface of hemisphere
- bleeding in 10's-30's
31Intraparenchymal hemorrhage
- traumatic spontaneous
- mid- to late adult life (peak 60Y)
- most common cause hypertension (lt50 of cases)
- 15 of patients with hypertension die because of
brain hemorrhage - HT gt atherosclerosis, arteriolosclerosis,
necrosis of arterioles - Charcot-Bouchard microaneurysms
- rupture - intraparenchymal bleeding
- vessels lt300µm in basal ganglia
32- Other causes
- systemic coagulation disorders
- open heart surgery
- neoplasms
- vascular diseases (amyloid angiopathy,
vasculitis, berry aneurysms, A-V malformations) - Clinical symptoms
- stroke - abrupt onset
- severe headache, vomiting, loss of consciousness
- coma
33- Grossly
- basal ganglia (putamen, external capsule),
thalamus, cerebral white matter, pons, cerebellum - brain is asymetrically distorted - mass effect -
herniation - dissection into ventricles and/or subarachnoid
space - no or sparse necrosis
- pseudocyst - hemosiderin in the wall
34CNS trauma
- epidural hematoma
- subdural hematoma
- traumatic parenchymal injuries
- Concussion
- Diffuse axonal injury
- Contusion
- Complications
35Concussion
- transient loss of consciousness, widespread
paralysis, seizures - recovery over hours to days
- loss of memory about the trauma
- no anatomic lesion!
36Diffuse axonal injury
- cause of posttraumatic dementia or persistent
vegetative state - result of sudden angular acceleration/deceleration
- stretch of nerve cell processes
- grossly - no changes! (rarely minute areas of
hemorrhage)
37Contusion
- result of blunt trauma
- lacerations (tearing) and hemorrhages in the
superficial brain parenchyma - traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage
- microscopically - small hemorrhagic infarcts
- any place, most commonfrontal poles, temporal
poles, occipital poles, posterior cerebellum - skull is usually intact!
- healing by glial scar, hemosiderin deposits
- common cause of seizure activity
38Complications
- posttraumatic edema (herniations, secondary
infarcts) - infections, licquorrhea
- posttraumatic hydrocephalus
- seizures
39Infections
- 2 factors - 1. nature of the infectious agent
(rabies, HSV I) - 2. integrity of normal host defenses
(skull fracture) - bacteria, viruses, fungi, higher organisms
(amebae, parasites) - meningesCSF meningitis
- brain parenchyma encephalitis
- meninges -gt brain meningoencephalitis
- localized (abscess, poliomyelitis) generalized
(bacterial leptomeningitis)
40Gates of infection
- blood - hematogenous
- nerves - neurotropic (HSV, rabies)
- trauma - direct infection
- ear - otogenic (mastoiditis, ottitis media)
- paranasal sinuses (frontal sinusitis)
- puncture - iatrogenic (lumbal pucture)
41(Lepto)Meningitis
- arachnoidpia matersubarachnoid space
- rapid spread via subarachnoid space -
generalization - purulent (usually bacterial)
- lymphocytic (viral)
- chronic (bacterial, fungal, amebic)
42Purulent meningitis
- Etiology
- newborns - E. coli (neural tube defects!)
- children - H. influenzae (vactination!), Str.
pneumoniae - young adults - N. meningitidis (small epidemies -
army, holiday camps) - old adults, posttraumatic - Str. pneumoniae, G-
bacilli
43- Grossly
- meninges are congested, edematous, opaque
- exudate in subarach. space (pus, fibrin) -
yelowish colour - distribution varies - pneumococcal m.convexities
hemophilusbasilar exudate - congestion and edema of the brain and spinal cord
- most severe cases - ventricular ependymitis
pyocephalus - Microscopically
- leptimeningessubarachnoid space filled by
purulent exsudate (neutrophils, fibrin, bacteria)
44- Clinical features
- fever, general symptoms (fatigue, ...)
- meningeal signs - headache, stiff neck, altered
mental status, photophobia) - CSF is turbid, neutrophils, protein, glucose
levels are decreased, bacteria - prognosis depends on rapidity of diagnosis
antimicrobial treatment - late complication meningeal adhesions -
hydrocephalus
45Lymphocytic meningitis
- usually of viral origin (so called "aseptic")
- self-limited, much better prognosis - spontaneous
healing, no complications - any viral infection (most frequent mumps, echo-,
coxackie-, EBV, HSV) - sometimes associated with concurrent encephalitis
- clinically similar to bacterial m. - less severe
symptoms - CSF - lymphocytes, slightly elevated protein,
glucose normal
46Chronic meningitis
- bacteria (TB!, Brucella, Treponema pallidum) and
fungi (Cryptococcus neoformans - AIDS!) - slower development
- Grossly - basilary meningitis
- Microscopically - lympho, plasma cells,
macrophages (TB - Orth's cells), fibroblasts,
granulomas, caseous necrosis (TB)
47- Clinically - headache, stiff neck - may be
absent! - CSF - mononuclear cells, increased protein,
decreased glucose - Complications - adhesions, hydrocephalus,
endarteritis (intimal proliferation with
subsequent occlusion of lumen) - infarcts
48Parenchymal infections
- localized (abscess, tuberculoma, toxoplasmosis)
- generalized (viral encephalitis)
49Brain abscess
- wide variety of bacteria (Staphylococci,
Streptococci, anaerobes) - hematogenous spread - from elsewhere in the body
(endocarditis, lung abscesses, bronchiectasis,
osteomyelitis) - contiguous spread - adjacent foci of infection
(otitis media, sinusitis) - direct implantation - trauma
- most commonly - cerebral hemispheres (temporal
and frontal lobes) - solitary or multiple
50- enlargement - mass effect symptoms according to
localization - misdiagnosed as a tumor
- cavity filled by thick pus (yellow-green),
delimited by pyogenic membrane (layer of
granulation tissue, richly vascular) - surrounding parenchyma edematous, congested
- reactive astrocytes
51Viral encephalitis
- almost always spread from extracerebral sources
(varicella-zoster rabies) - almost always also infection of meninges -
lymphocytes in CSF - histologically - most characteristic
lymphocytic perivascular infiltrates (cuffing)
microglial nodules neuronophagia (necrosis and
fagocytosis of individual neurons) sometimes
viral inclusions (Negri bodies in rabies, CMV
inclusions)
52- specific feature tropism of certain viruses
(zoster - ggl. cells of posterior ganglia
poliomyelitis - anterior corns of spinal cord) - certain viruses cause latent infections - hidden
for many months to years - reactivation
infection - 2 groups
- 1. acute viral infections
- 2. slow viral diseases
53Acute viral infections
- (pan)encephalitis, meningoencephalitis
- arthropode-borne (arbo) viruses - mosquitoes,
ticks - perivascular infiltrates, microglial nodules
- regional epidemies - eastern and western equine,
Venezuelan, St. Louis, California encephalitis - frequently fatal
54- Herpetic infections (HSV I, II)
- necrotizing, hemorrhagic
- inclusion bodies!
- children (newborns), young adults
- fatal, in survivors - dementia, loss of memory
- encephalitis may accompany other common
infections - measles, rubella, chickenpox, mumps
and also in AIDS (both HIV and opportunistic
infections)
55Slow virus diseases
- very long latency, slow progression
- Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSP)
- Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML)
- Subacute spongiform encephalopathy
(Creutzfeld-Jacob)
56Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSP)
- children and young adults
- following measles, rarely after vaccination
- clinically - changes of the personality, slow
progression to death - histologically - neuronophagia, gliosis
57Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML)
- JC virus (no relation to Creutzfeld-Jacob
disease!) - slowly evolving encephalopathy, in
immunocompromised (AIDS, leukemias,
immunosupression, TB) - virus infects oligodendroglia - areas of
demyelinization - slow progression of neurologic symptoms, no
treatment
58Subacute spongiform encephalopathy
(Creutzfeld-Jacob)
- rapidly progressing dementia (months-several
years) -gt death - very rare (11Mio) sporadic and familial forms
- etiologic element prion (PRotein infectION) -
protein with abnormal tertiary structure - exact mechanism of development is unclear
- closely related to other prion diseases (scrapie,
kuru (N. Guinea), mad cow disease) - histology - cerebral cortex - bubbles and holes
(spongiform encephalopathy)
59Other CNS infections
- protozoal - malaria, toxoplasmosis (pseudocysts
in AIDS), amoebae, ricketts, parasites
60Tumors
- some specific features
- irrespective of dignity (ben/mal) similar
clinical symptoms - sometimes localization is more important than
biological behavior (ependymoma of IV. ventricle
- respiratory centre!)
61Tumors of neuroepithelial tissue
- Astrocytic tumors
- wide range of neoplasms
- differ in location, age and gender distribution,
morphological features, growth potency - tendency to dedifferentiation in recurrent tumors
62Astrocytoma
- diffuse infiltration of margin - local
infiltrative growth - difficult operative
treatment - younger adults
- several cm - infiltration via commissures into
contralateral hemisphere - Histology
- Fibrillary astrocytoma
- Gemistocytic astrocytoma
- Anaplastic astrocytoma - increased cellularity,
distinct nuclear atypia and marked mitotic
activity
63Glioblastoma multiforme
- poorly differentiated
- hemorrhage, necrosis - inhomogenous structure
- marked nuclear atypia and mitotic activity,
prominent neovascularisation and necrosis with
pseudopalisading of tumor cells - dismal prognosis (average survival 8-10M)
64Oligodendroglioma
- less frequent (5 of all glial tumors)
- well-differentiated, diffusely infiltrating
- adults, cerebral hemispheres
- tumor cells with rounded nuclei
- microcalcifications (X-rays!)
65Ependymoma
- cerebral ventricles, central canal of the spinal
cord - children and young adults (first two decades)
- presents by blocking CSF - no possible operation
- rosettes ( columnar cells arranged around a
central lumen)
66Medulloblastoma
- malignant infantile invasive tumor of cerebellum
(vermis, later hemispheres) - neuronal differentiation
- metastasizes via CSF (implantations on
ventricular ependyme and in subarachnoid space)
67Meningioma
- slowly growing benign tumor
- attached to dura mater - ventral poles of cranial
cavity (falx, convexity, sphenoidal bone) - adults, predominance for females
- usually solitary, rarely multiple
- invasion of bone (not a sign of malignancy)
- whorls and psammoma bodies (Ca2)
- impression of brain parenchyma
68Metastatic tumors of the CNS
- carcinomas (lungs, breast)
- melanoma
- choriocarcinoma
- renal clear cell carcinoma
- multiple lesions, sharp circumscription, spheric,
collateral edema
69Degenerative diseasesDiseases of myelin
- Multiple sclerosis
- young adults, peak incidence 18-40Y
- waxing and waning neurological abnormalities
- different regions, progression over many years
- visual disturbances (blurred vision, diplopia,
scotomata) - paresthesias, spasticity of extremities, speech
disturbances, gait abnormalities
70- pathogenesis not fully understood
- autoimmune disease?
- environmentalhereditary factors
- Grossly
- external appearance of brain and spinal cord -
normal - cut section - areas of demyelinization (plaques)
- plaques anywhere - common sites periventricular
areas, optic nerves, spinal cord - early lesions pinksoft, chronic ones grayfirm
71- Microscopically
- areas of demyelinization
- starts in perivenous regions
- variable perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate
72Metabolic and toxic disturbances
- nutritional - avitaminosis B1, B12
- B1 (thiamin)
- Wernicke-Korsakoff sy (encephalopathypsychosis)
- accompanied by peripheral neuropathy
- alcoholics!
- B12 (cobalamin)
- pernicious anemia, peripheral neuropathy
- subacute degeneration of spinal cord (dorsal and
lateral white columns)
73Poissoning
- lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), arsenic (As)
- industrial chemicals
- medicaments
- irradiation
- alcohol (acute, chronic-Wernicke-Korsakoff sy)
74Metabolic disorders
- metabolic encephalopathy
- hyperglycaemic coma
- uremia
- portotsystemic encephalopathy - hepatic coma
- M. Wilson (hepatolenticular degeneration)
- phenylketonuria
75Neuronal degenerative disorders
- unknown origin
- similar clinical presentation
- selective lesion of one or several functional
systems, others uninvovlved (e.g. Parkinsons
disease - striatum and ncl. niger) - symetric, progressive course
- inherited or sporadic
76- involvement of cortex - dementia (Alzheimer,
Pick) - involvement of basal ganglia - extrapyramidal
symptomes (rigidity, tremor) (Parkinson,
Huntington) - spinocerebelar degeneration (Friedreich ataxia)
- motoric neurons (ALS, Werding-Hoffman)
77Alzheimer's disease
- most common cause of dementia in elderly (50Y)
- sporadic, in 10 family history
- cause remains unknown
- factors associated with development genetic
factors, deposition of amyloid (amyloid precursor
protein-APP)
78Morphology
- usually brain atrophy (frontal, temporal,
parietal lobes) - symetrical dilatation of lateral ventricles
- hydrocephalus ex vacuo
- Micro
- neurofibrillary tangles (coarse filamentous
aggregates within cytoplasm of neurons) -
hippocampus, basal forebrain, neocortex and brain
stem - senile plaques - aggregates of tortuous coarse
neurites in the neuropil of cerebral cortex,
sometimes with amyloid core - amyloid angiopathy
- only if numerous lesions are present - diagnosis
of AD
79Parkinsonism
- disturbance in motor neuron functions
- rigidity, expressionless face, stooped posture
- gait disturbances, slowing of voluntary
movements, pill-rolling tremor - James Parkinson 1817 (1st descr.)
- Awakenings (R. deNiro)
80- idiopathic - progressive, 5-8th decade
- parkinson sy
- lesion of dopaminergic pathways
- grossly - depigmentation of susbst. nigra and
locus coeruleus - micro - loss of melanin containing ggl. cells
- Lewy bodies - intraplasmatic inclusions
81Other diseases
- Huntington d. - fatal disorder of extrapyramidal
motor system - choreadementia - Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis - (Lou
Gehrig-baseball star) - progressive degener. of
pyramidal system - muscle weaknes, atrophy - Werding-Hoffmann d. - AR - congenital hypotonia
(floppy infant sy) - loss of neurons in anterior
horns - death in 1stY - Pick d. - lobar atrophy - less frequent than
Alzheimer, similar clinical features
82Diseases of peripheral nervous system
- axons of motoric and sensoric neurons, Schwann
cells (myelin) - two groups of diseases
- peripheral neuropathies
- tumors of peripheral nerves
83Peripheral neuropathies
- nutritional and metabolic (DM, avitaminosis
B1-thiamine, B6-pyridoxine), alcoholism, renal
failure - toxic (lead, arsenic, antitumor drugs-cisplatin,
vincristine, organic solvents) - inflammatory (Guillain-Barré, vasculitic
neuropathy, leprosy, sarcoidosis) - hereditary
- miscellaneous (amyloidosis, paraneoplastic, Ig
disorders)
84Tumors of peripheral nerves
- Schwannoma (neurilemmoma, neurinoma)
- tumor of Schwann cells
- solitary, encapsulated, sometimes pigmented
- any peripheral nerve, often N.VIII (acoustic
neuromas - deafness) or spinal nerves
(paravertebral) - nerve at the periphery of the tumor (surgery
possible!) - Histo - 2 components
- Antoni A - organized, palisaded (Verocay bodies)
- Antoni B - myxoid, patternless
- no risk of malignant transformation
85- Neurofibroma
- tumor of Schwann cells - similar nature
- more frequently multiple, sometimes
unencapsulated - peripheral branches of nerves - fusiform
enlargement - subcutaneous tissue - nerve embedded within tumor
- Histo - loose structure, slender elongated cells
with "wavy" nuclei - no palisades
- risk of malignant transformation (it is rare!)
86Neurofibromatosis (von Recklinghausen's disease)
- inherited - AD - multiple neurofibromas anywhere
(skin, retroperitoneum, GIT, spinal nerves) - skin lesions (pedunculated neurofibromas, café au
lait spots) - high risk of malignant transformation!!! -
malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) - Elephant Man (D. Lynch)