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Meningioma (Brain Membrane Tumor) Surgery in Turkey

A meningioma develops from the arachnoid cells of the membranes that wrap the brain and spinal cord, and it is the most common primary brain tumor in adults. A large share are caught incidentally on an MRI taken for some other reason, without any complaint. For this reason a diagnosis of 'meningioma' is not in itself a decision to operate: a small, silent tumor is followed with regular imaging, while a growing or compressing one calls for surgery or radiosurgery. This page explains, in measured terms, the balance between observation, surgery and Gamma Knife in meningioma, and realistic expectations, for patients reaching us from every part of Turkey and abroad.

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Where Does a Meningioma Arise and Why Is It Usually Benign?

A meningioma originates not within the brain tissue but from the membrane that covers it from the outside; it is therefore classed as an extra-axial, brain-outside tumor and tends to push the brain aside rather than infiltrate it as it grows. In the World Health Organization classification roughly four out of five cases are grade 1 (benign); the remainder behave atypically (grade 2) or, rarely, malignantly (grade 3). It is typically more frequent in women and increases with advancing age. Because the tumor grows by displacing the brain, the surgical margin in a suitable patient is more distinct; this is one reason long-term outcomes are comparatively favorable in benign meningioma. Even so, 'benign' does not mean 'risk-free' — the decisive factor for outcome is the tumor's location and its proximity to critical vessels and nerves.

Symptoms and Methods of Diagnosis

Because they grow slowly, the symptoms of meningioma begin insidiously and take shape according to tumor location: a headache that worsens over time, a first-ever epileptic seizure, limb weakness or numbness matching the compressed region, narrowing of the visual field, loss of smell, and changes in mood and personality particularly with frontal-region tumors. A notable proportion of patients never notice the tumor. The basis of diagnosis is contrast-enhanced brain MRI; a meningioma usually appears as a mass joining the dura on a broad base, taking up contrast densely and homogeneously, leaving a thin 'tail' impression in the adjacent membrane. Computed tomography reveals intratumoral calcification and thickening of the neighbouring bone. The exact type and grade become clear only on pathological examination of the removed tissue.

Not Every Meningioma Needs Urgent Surgery

The choice of treatment depends not on a single rule but on the tumor's size, its location, the growth trend seen on follow-up, the complaints it causes, and the patient's age and general health. For a small, asymptomatic meningioma — especially one found in an elderly patient — the right course is usually active surveillance with MRI at set intervals; intervening on every tumor at once is not correct. For symptomatic tumors that measurably grow or compress the brain, the goal is the safest and widest possible surgical removal. For deep-seated, surgically high-risk, or selected small-to-moderate tumors, stereotactic radiosurgery (Gamma Knife, CyberKnife) is an effective alternative. Which route is chosen is decided by multidisciplinary evaluation; the aim is not to impose a ready-made 'operation' but to offer each patient the plan most suited to them.

The Surgical Process and Recovery Period

In a patient planned for surgery, preparation includes a detailed neurological examination, contrast MRI, vascular imaging or preoperative embolisation when a tumor is richly vascular, and an anaesthetic assessment. In surgery the patient is positioned according to tumor location, the narrowest possible shave within the hairline is sufficient, the bone flap is lifted, and the tumor is removed under the microscope with neuronavigation; the broad-based membrane the tumor is attached to is also cleared when appropriate. The duration varies with the location and size of the tumor. There is then usually a day of intensive care and a few days in hospital; a control MRI assesses the extent of removal, and radiotherapy may be planned in atypical or malignant tumors according to the pathology. In uncomplicated benign cases, return to daily life usually takes a few weeks.

Risks and Honest Expectation

Meningioma surgery is major surgery and its risks must be discussed openly: bleeding, infection, a temporary or permanent neurological loss depending on tumor location, brain oedema lasting a few days and the possibility of seizures are foremost among them. These rates vary with the location and size of the tumor, the patient's age and additional illnesses; an experienced team and correct patient selection markedly reduce the risk but do not abolish it. Outcomes differ by grade: in grade 1 meningioma long-term control is usually possible after complete removal and recurrence is unlikely; in atypical and malignant tumors recurrence risk is high and follow-up is closer and more frequent. We make no promise of a guaranteed outcome; expectations are shared openly with the patient and relatives before surgery, because realistic information is part of treatment.

Sources

1Greenberg MS. Greenberg's Handbook of Neurosurgery. 10th ed. Thieme; 2023:803-817.
2DeMonte F, McDermott MW, Al-Mefty O, eds. Al-Mefty's Meningiomas. 2nd ed. Thieme; 2011:135-141.
3Simpson D. The recurrence of intracranial meningiomas after surgical treatment. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1957.
4Goldbrunner R, et al. EANO guideline on the diagnosis and management of meningiomas. Neuro-Oncology. 2021.
📚 Read our encyclopedia article for a detailed, fully-referenced medical explanation

Domande Frequenti

I have a meningioma but no complaints — should I have surgery immediately?

In most cases, no. A small, asymptomatic, slow-growing meningioma can be followed with MRI at intervals, especially in older patients. If the tumor grows, causes complaints or compresses, surgery or Gamma Knife comes into consideration. The decision is individual, based on the tumor's size, location and behaviour on follow-up.

Is a meningioma cancer?

The large majority of cases (about four in five) are benign (grade 1) and are not cancer in the classic sense. A smaller proportion behave atypically (grade 2) or malignantly (grade 3). The true grade is confirmed only by pathological examination of the removed tissue.

Could Gamma Knife alone be enough instead of surgery?

In some patients, yes. For deep-seated, surgically high-risk or selected small-to-moderate meningiomas, stereotactic radiosurgery can be effective. For large, symptomatic or markedly compressing tumors, however, surgery comes to the fore. The appropriate method is determined by MRI findings and multidisciplinary evaluation.

I am in another city — can you review my MRI remotely first?

Yes. Patients reach us from every province of Turkey. You can send your existing MRI or CT images via WhatsApp (+90 533 075 72 94) for a preliminary assessment. If appropriate, you will be invited for an examination and further imaging planned if needed.

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