Cranial metastases often suggest that the primary malignant tumor has intensified and has spread and metastasized, which is a more serious condition.
Cranial metastasis refers to the metastasis of other malignant tumors to the skull, which belongs to one of the clinical conditions of tumor bone metastasis and often indicates a more serious condition. It can be manifested as single or multiple swellings in the skull, which may be accompanied by pain. Tumor invasion into the skull may present with symptoms of limited neurological deficits and increased intracranial pressure, such as the development of motor and sensory deficits, headache, and nausea.
Patients with cranial metastatic tumor can shrink the tumor lesion and inhibit the growth of the tumor through surgical treatment, radiotherapy and chemotherapy under the guidance of doctors, and meanwhile, the primary tumor should be actively treated to improve the quality of patients’ life and prolong their survival time.
It is recommended that patients with cranial metastases should seek medical treatment in time, and be actively treated under the guidance of doctors in order to maximize the prognosis.