Disease of the pineal gland

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Diseases of the pineal gland include cysts, calcifications and tumors.

Cysts[edit | edit source]

Cysts of the pineal gland are mostly asymptomatic. However, larger cysts can compress surrounding structures. They occur most often in young women.

Calcification[edit | edit source]

Calcified formations - the so-called brain sand (corpora arenacea) commonly occur with increasing age. These are protein formations in which calcium salts are stored.

Tumors[edit | edit source]

Pineocytoma

Pineal tumors (pinealomas) are rare. Most (50-70%) originate from isolated embryonic germ cells. Tumors that are from cells of the parenchyma of the pineal gland - pinealocytes, are called pineocytoma and pineoblastoma. Pineocytoma (pinealocytoma) is a slow-growing benign tumor. Pineoblastoma is a fast-growing high-grade tumor.

Germ cell tumors[edit | edit source]

They most often take the form of a germinoma , resembling a testicular seminoma or an ovarian dysgerminoma. Other types according to germ cell differentiation are embryonal carcinoma, choriocarcinoma and, rarely, teratomas .

Tumors of the pineal parenchyma[edit | edit source]

Pineoblastoma

These lesions originate from specialized cells of the pineal gland (pinealocytes) that have features of neuronal differentiation. Pineocytomas are highly differentiated lesions with areas of neuropil , cells with a small round nucleus and no evidence of mitosis or necrosis. Pineoblastoma is a high-grade variant with little sign of neuronal differentiation, densely packed small cells with necrosis and a number of mitoses. High-grade tumors of the pineal gland occur in children, while low-grade lesions more often affect adults. Highly aggressive pineoblastoma often spreads through the cerebrospinal fluid .


Links[edit | edit source]

Related Articles[edit | edit source]

References [ edit | edit source ][edit | edit source]

  • KUMAR, [edited by] Vinay, Vinay KUMAR and Jon C. Aster ; with illustrations by James A. Perkins. Robbins and Cotran pathological basis of disease : [object Object]. 9th edition. Philadelphia : Elsevier Saunders, c2015. ISBN 9781455726134 .
  • WHITEHEAD, MT, C OH and A RAJU, et al. Physiologic pineal region, choroid plexus, and dural calcifications in the first decade of life. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol [online] . 2015, vol. 36, no. 3, pp. 575-80, also available from < https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25355815 >. ISSN 0195-6108 (print), 1936-959X.