🧠 Brain Tumours
Metastases vs primary tumours, gliomas vs meningiomas, clinical presentation, and the neurosurgeon’s full toolkit — from dexamethasone to Gamma Knife.
The Golden Rule — Metastases First
When a brain tumour appears on a scan, statistically it came from somewhere else. Before entertaining any primary brain tumour diagnosis, a metastatic source must be thoroughly excluded. This single rule prevents an enormous number of diagnostic errors.
The Fundamental Surgical Distinction
Meningioma compresses the brain from the outside — it has a clear surgical plane between tumour and brain. Complete resection is achievable and often curative. The brain springs back when the mass is removed.
Glioma infiltrates the brain from the inside — tumour cells migrate along white matter tracts far beyond the visible tumour mass. There is no clean margin. You cannot resect a glioma to cure; you can only debulk to relieve mass effect and prolong survival.
This distinction — compressor vs infiltrator — determines the entire surgical philosophy and patient counselling for each tumour type.