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Meningioma Appearance on MRI

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We're focused on the MR appearance of meningiomas

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as they relate to different pulsing sequences.

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I'm going to start out with a sagittal,

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garden variety T1-weighted image.

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Here's our extra-axial mass in this 43-year-old

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man with left-sided weakness.

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It's compressing the corpus callosum downward, and it's

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pretty iso-intense with the adjacent gray matter,

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a little darker than the white matter, better,

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but it's very sharply marginated,

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so it doesn't infiltrate the surrounding tissues.

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And it has this nice hypointense pseudocapsule around

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it which consists of fibrous tissue and some dura.

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Now, this is a meningioma.

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It's a large falx meningioma.

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So here's your axial T2,

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and that demonstrates the typical feature of meningioma,

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which is that it's iso-intense, rather bland-looking,

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it's a little bit heterogeneous inside,

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and sometimes you can see little areas of microcyst

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formation. In this case, not so much.

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By the way, uncommonly, you can get macrocyst formation.

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Oh. CSF-like, which can be a little bit confusing.

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This one pushes over the falx in the midline,

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but it's typically very similar to brain parenchyma.

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This one a little brighter than the adjacent cortex,

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but pretty darn close. Then we move over to the FLAIR.

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Typically on the FLAIR,

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the meningioma is going to be hyperintense relative to

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brain and even a little bit hyperintense

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relative to the cortex. Not too much.

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But note the vasogenic edema around the lesion.

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Now, this vasogenic edema pretty calm, not so extreme,

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but it can be really extreme.

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And you and I have both seen young residents looking at

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these cases when the edema is extreme and the swelling

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of the brain and mass effect is profound.

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People,

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first thing they say is GBM (Glioblastoma multiforme).

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And you certainly don't want to do that.

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You want to get in the habit of identifying

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that this thing is attached to the falx,

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that you don't have brain parenchyma

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along its deep margin.

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So there is buckling of the white matter and gray matter

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over top of the lesion, but not underneath.

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There are displaced vessels.

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Don't let the vasogenic edema, especially on the FLAIR,

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dissuade you from the correct diagnosis.

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Now, let's keep going, shall we?

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Let's pull down our ADC map and our diffusion-weighted

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image. So on the left is our diffusion image.

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And there isn't really much diffusion restriction.

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There's a little bit,

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and the reason is it's a very firm lesion.

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It's a desmoplastic lesion.

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So you're going to see a little bit of diffusion

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restriction, but not to the degree that you'll see with,

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say,

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a medulloblastoma where they're really

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heavily diffusion restricted.

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And these are also frequently desmoplastic lesions.

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So some similar diffusion characteristics

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to medulloblastoma, but not as profound.

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And with the lesions that are more cystic or a little more

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loose-looking, you may have no fusion restriction at all.

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Here's the ADC map.

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And notice that it's not black like you would expect

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with really strong diffusion restriction.

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We don't have a spec image here, a spectroscopy image,

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but one characteristic of meningioma that I'll

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bring to your attention is they get elevated.

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Alanine, so if you're taking a neural specialty exam,

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that's one you ought to be aware of,

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whereas one of the look-alike schwannoma will

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have elevation of Taurine and GABA.

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So we'll set that aside, that's a little bit more advanced.

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Then we'll move on to the next pulsing sequence,

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which is the T1,

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and I want to bring that up alongside the gradient echo.

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So I got T1 and GRE.

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Now, on the T1,

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there are some little speckly bright areas,

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but they're on the periphery,

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so those are not areas of hemorrhage,

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even though these can bleed very uncommonly.

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These are areas of slow compressive flow in the adjacent

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blood vessels that are draped over the lesion.

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And you can see they're a bit darker on the gradient echo,

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but I'm showing the gradient echo because of this twinkly

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speckly irregular low signal intensity character of

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somatomatous calcifications in meningioma. Now,

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we know 20% of

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them will have visual calcifications on CT macrocalcifications.

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But it's really common when you section them to see some

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microcalcifications in meningioma, and they're best seen on

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GRE or susceptibility-weighted image such as SWAN

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or blood-sensitive imaging. Then finally,

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I go over to the coronal T2,

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which shows the same characteristics

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that we saw on the axial.

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This is a very beautiful T2 that reemphasizes

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the isointensity with the brain parenchyma,

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the draped vessels around the lesion,

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the buckling of the cortex and white

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matter around the lesion.

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There's no brain parenchyma on the

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falx side of the lesion.

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We have a beautiful CSF cleft of this large falx

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meningioma pushing the ventricular system on down.

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And for those of you that are observing very carefully,

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yes, there is left-sided odontoid air cell disease.

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Now, I want to turn to you in this next vignette and talk about

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the vascular enhancement characteristics of meningioma.

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So let's move on, shall we?

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Sure.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Pediatrics

Neuroradiology

Neoplastic

MRI

Brain

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