Double Trouble: A Case Report on the Surgical Management of Dual Intracranial Metastases
Ilko Ilyov, Stefan Burev, Asen Hadzhiyanev, Daniel Kolev, Stela Petrova, Petar-Preslav Petrov, Kiril Ivanov, Plamen Penchev

TL;DR
This case report describes the surgical treatment of a patient with two brain metastases from breast cancer, highlighting the challenges and outcomes of managing such complex cases.
Contribution
The novelty lies in presenting a detailed clinical case of dual intracranial metastases managed with modern surgical techniques and neuronavigation.
Findings
The patient underwent successful gross total resection of a second metastatic lesion in the left parietal lobe.
The surgical approach using neuronavigation and microsurgical techniques resulted in no postoperative complications.
The patient's symptoms improved post-surgery, and she was discharged after five days.
Abstract
Intracranial metastasis disease (IMD) has proven to be a frequent secondary occurrence, usually for primary cancers such as lung, breast, and melanoma, which have a high possibility of metastasizing to the brain. Due to the reasons listed above, treatment and early diagnosis are incredibly challenging. In the past decade, medicine has developed much better imaging solutions and radiological and surgical approaches, increasing the postoperative survival prognosis and achieving more time-efficient results. It is still exceptionally difficult to be able to prevent what type of metastasis a patient might develop other than by using the tumor type or subtype. We present a case of a 51-year-old female patient entering the Neurosurgical Clinic at the University Hospital “St. Ivan Rilski” for operative treatment of a second metastatic lesion located on the left parietal lobe in January 2024.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBrain Metastases and Treatment · Meningioma and schwannoma management · Glioma Diagnosis and Treatment
