RESUMO
Hypothalamic gangliocytomas have been shown to contain immunoreactivity for hypophysiotropic peptides and some have been associated with endocrine dysfunction. Extrahypothalamic gangliocytomas are usually not associated with endocrine abnormalities. We studied nine cerebral or cerebellar gangliocytomas from six men and three women; none of the patients had detectable alterations of endocrine homeostasis. On histological examination, the tumor cells resembled hypothalamic neurons. Electron microscopy disclosed the presence of dense-core vesicles in neuronal cytoplasm and processes resembling Herring bodies, and there were synaptic contacts between tumor cells. All but two tumors contained immunocytochemical positivity for at least one peptide hormone or amine; these included somatostatin, corticotropin-releasing hormone, beta-endorphin, galanin, vasoactive intestinal peptide, calcitonin, serotonin, catecholamines or met-enkephalin. These tumors have been thought to represent neoplasms arising in ectopic autonomic neural tissue. Their morphological features, their similarity to hypothalamic gangliocytomas and the multiple immunoreactivities shown here suggest that they can be regarded as tumors of peptidergic neurons that are widely distributed throughout the central nervous system.