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mardi 5 août 2014

Info Post
By Annabelle Holman


Intrinsic brain tumors have two features that make them different from other types of cancer. One, is they rarely, if ever, metastasize to other organs in the body. Two, cells often break away from the main mass to invade the surrounding brain and form new growths a few millimeters or more away. These tumors are more common in children and the elderly than in the general population. The most malignant of these is called glioblastoma multiforme (GBM).

Intracranial tumors are the most common cause of death by cancer in people under twenty years old. Second only to leukemia, they are the most common cause of cancer death in men aged 20-29. Neural tumors are the 5th leading cause of cancer fatalities in women aged 20-39.

Luckily, GBM is infrequent; there are no more than two or three new cases per 100,000 individuals and account for only 20% of all intracranial neoplasms. Their propensity to invade the surrounding brain tissue means that it is not possible for them to be completely eradicated by surgical means. Try scraping off every bit of butter from a slice of toast.

GBM arises from cells in the brain called glial cells. Neurons, which are generally post-mitotic, meaning they lose the ability to divide once they have achieved terminal differentiation. Glial cells, on the other hand, may continue to divide and replicate throughout life. There is evidence from in vivo and in vitro studies to suggest that some, if not all, astrocytomas arise in utero.

There are three different types of glial cells in the brain, each with different functions. These are astrocytes, microglia and oligodendrocytes. Astrocytes are the most common neural cell type found in brain tumors. These are called astrocytomas. GBM is the most malignant of the astrocytomas, with median survival time of less than five months without treatment.

Astrocytes are star-shaped glial cells found in the brain and spinal cord. The provide support to the endothelial cells that form the blood brain barrier, provide nutrients to nervous tissue and form a part of the repair process following trauma to the central nervous system. There is evidence to suggest that astrocytes communicate with nerve cells by releasing a neurotransmitter called glutamate.

Oligodendrocytes are less spiny than their astrocytic cousins. Their main role in the nervous system is to provide a fatty sheath of insulation that makes more rapid nerve transmission possible. One oligodendrocyte can ensheath up to 50 neurons. The fatty sheath, called myelin, comes under attack from immune system cells in the debilitating condition known as multiple sclerosis (MS).

Microglia are a special type of immune system cell resident within the central nervous system. These cells respond quickly to invasion from foreign bodies, embrace them through a process called phagocytosis and present them for destruction by T-cells. Resting microglia look very cute under the microscope, with tiny spines called processes. Activated microglia share more morphological characteristics with cells of the immune system, or leukocytes.




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