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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The central nervous system in childhood leukemia: I. The arachnoid

Robert A. Price, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1973 - 
- Vol. 31, Iss: 3, pp 520-533
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TLDR
It is shown that CNS leukemia is primarily an arachnoid disease, and abnormalities in brain parenchyma apparently result from leukemic extension through pia‐glial membrane or interference with local perfusion due to constriction of blood vessels by perivascular arachNoid leukemia.
Abstract
A histopathologic study was performed to evaluate the distribution and extension of intracranial leukemic infiltrates and their relationship to other morphological disturbances of the central nervous system (CNS) in childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia Of 126 brains examined, 70 had arachnoid leukemia at the time of autopsy The earliest evidence of leukemia was seen in the walls of superficial arachnoid veins With more advanced arachnoid leukemia, the disease was seen to extend into the deep arachnoid surrounding blood vessels as they course through the brain The arachnoid leukemia followed a predictable expanding pattern to eventual invasion of brain parenchyma with destruction of the pia-glial membrane Leukemic infiltrate at the capillary-neural tissue interface was present only following destruction of pia-glial membrane secondary to deep arachnoid leukemia Arachnoid fibrosis and certain brain parenchymatous lesions were found in association with arachnoid leukemia The brain lesions included gliosis, necrosis, cerebral hemorrhage, and nonhemorrhagic degenerative encephalopathy This study demonstrates that CNS leukemia is primarily an arachnoid disease Disturbances of brain parenchyma apparently result from leukemic extension through pia-glial membrane or interference with local perfusion due to constriction of blood vessels by perivascular arachnoid leukemia

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Citations
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Diagnosis and treatment of leptomeningeal metastases from solid tumors: Experience with 90 patients

TL;DR: It is concluded that vigorous treatment of leptomeningeal metastases with intrathecal chemotherapeutic agents improves symptomatology in some patients, and at times prolongs survival.
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Infiltration of the leptomeninges by systemic cancer. A clinical and pathologic study.

TL;DR: Leptomeningeal invasion by systemic cancer was diagnosed clinically or pathologically in 50 patients over four years, usually inexorably progressive, but in some instances responded to radiation and intrathecal chemotherapy.
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The central nervous system in childhood leukemia. II. Subacute leukoencephalopathy

TL;DR: Comparison of selected clinical features of patients with and without leukoencephalopathy showed that methotrexate administered intravenously after a cumulative dose of CNS irradiation of 2000 rads or more can result in degeneration of CNS white matter in patients with ALL.
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Detection of minimal residual disease in acute leukemia: methodologic advances and clinical significance

TL;DR: The premise underlying studies of minimal residual disease (MRD) is that better estimates of the total body burden of leukemic cells would improve clinical management and advance cure rates.
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Flow rate of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) : a concept common to normal blood-CSF barrier function and to dysfunction in neurological diseases

TL;DR: A "population variation coefficient" of the CSF/serum quotients for IgG, IgA and IgM (delta Q/Q) which is evaluated as a function of increasing albumin quotients (QAlb) indicates that there was no change in blood-CSF barrier related structures with respect to diffusion controlled protein transfer from blood into CSF and hence nochange in molecular size dependent selectivity.
References
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Book

A Textbook of Histology

TL;DR: The cell Epithelium Glands and secretion Blood Connective tissue proper Adipose tissue Cartilage Bone Bone marrow and blood cell formation Muscular tissue The nervous tissue, Jay B. Angevine
Journal ArticleDOI

Electron microscopy of muscular arteries; pial vessels of the cat and monkey

TL;DR: Pial blood vessels of the cat and monkey are qualitatively similar, and the smooth muscle is capable of organizing the connective tissue skeleton that pervades the vessel, and probably is responsible for the precursor substances that contribute to all of the formed extracellular elements.
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A comparative study of central nervous system irradiation and intensive chemotherapy early in remission of childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia

TL;DR: It is concluded that one week of intensive chemotherapy does not prolong remission, that 2400 rads craniospinal irradiation early in remission prevents or delays CNS leukemia and prolongs complete remission, and that once CNS leukemia develops, 2400 radS crani Hospitals irradiation is not sufficient to eradicate it.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Cerebral Collateral Circulation 2. Production of Cerebral Infarction by Ischemic Anoxia and its Reversibility in Early Stages

D. Denny-Brown, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1957 - 
TL;DR: An attempt has been made to produce varying degrees of failure of the collateral circulation and to examine the resulting functional impairment in terms of neuronal injury as indicated by the electrocorticogram and steady potential (S.P.) .
Journal ArticleDOI

The Arterial Medial Cell, Smooth Muscle, or Multifunctional Mesenchyme?

TL;DR: An editorial emphasis will be placed on two basic assumptions regarding the artery wall and atherogenesis, which represent a single cell type in the arterial media, smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts.
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