Peripheral nerve, Psammamatous melanotic schwannoma

Details
Disease Category
Gender
Age
20 years
Organ System/Discipline
Diagnosis
Psammomatous melanotic schwannoma
Clinical History

20-year-old woman with long standing back pain radiating down the right leg and numbness in the S1 dermatome. Neuroimaging shows a large extradural lesion in the L5-S1 neural foramen, compressing the nerve root.

Case Discussion

Psammomatous melanotic schwannoma is a rare tumour of peripheral nerves. It is a variant of melanotic schwannoma, which is itself a variant of schwannoma. The tumour cells have the ultrastructure and immunophenotype of Schwann cells (S100 positive) but also contain melanosomes and are reactive for melanoma markers (e.g. HMB-45, Melan-A). Microscopically, they are pigmented lesions composed of spindled and epithelioid cells; psammoma bodies are numerous. Nuclear atypia is not uncommon and 10% of these tumours follow a malignant course. About 50% of psammomatous melanotic schwannomas are associated with Carney complex, an autosomal dominant condition characterized by lentigines, cardiac myxoma, and endocrine overactivity.

Image Contributors
Gao, A., Munoz, D.

Cite

Gao, A., Munoz, D. Peripheral nerve, Psammamatous melanotic schwannoma. Digital Laboratory Medicine Library, Dept of Laboratory Medicine & Pathobiology, University of Toronto. Published . Accessed December 17, 2025. https://dev.dlml.cflabs.ca/image/peripheral-nerve-psammamatous-melanotic-schwannoma-lmp77373