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A glioma derived from relatively undifferentiated ependymal cells, comprising approximately 1–3% of all intracranial neoplasms; ependymomas occur in all age groups and may originate from the lining of any of the ventricles or, more commonly, from the central canal of the spinal cord; histologically, the neoplastic cells tend to be arranged radially about blood vessel s, to which they are attached by means of fibrillary processes.
- myxopapillary e. a slow-growing e. of the filum terminale, occurring most often in young adults, consisting of cuboidal cells in papillary arrangement around a mucinous vascular core.
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ep·en·dy·mo·ma (.)ep-.en-də-'mō-mə n, pl -mas also -ma·ta -mət-ə a glioma arising in or near the ependyma
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n.
a cerebral tumour derived from the glial (non-nervous) cells lining the cavities of the ventricles of the brain (see ependyma). It may obstruct the flow of cerebrospinal fluid, causing a hydrocephalus.
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epen·dy·mo·ma (ə-pen″də-moґmə) a neoplasm composed of differentiated ependymal cells, occurring most often in the posterior cranial fossa in children and in the spinal cord in adults. Most are slow growing and benign, but a few are malignant.Medical dictionary. 2011.