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Vestibular Schwannoma vs Meningioma

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So we have another mass involving

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the cerebellopontine angle.

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So one of the challenges now is

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how do we address this mass,

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especially when we see no involvement of the

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internal auditory canal?

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So remember,

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the two things that we talked about before was,

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does the mass enhance?

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Is there a dural tail and is there involvement

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of the cerebellopontine angle?

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So now, we're trying to differentiate essentially between

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a vestibular schwannoma and a meningioma,

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and how do we go about that?

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Well, the first thing that we do is we look at the

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mass and look at the T2-weighted images.

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So now we're going to talk about, if you will,

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the higher level analysis of these images.

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So on the T2-weighted images, meningiomas,

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as we'll see later,

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tend to be isointense to the adjacent brain,

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where schwannomas tend to be a little bit more heterogeneous

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on the T2-weighted sequences.

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So when we look at the internal characteristics of the

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T2-weighted sequences, we can see some areas that are a

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little bit higher signal and there are other

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areas that are a little bit lower signal.

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So it's relatively homogeneous, but not really.

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So one can say that it does have some heterogeneous T2 signal.

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So, let's look at the T1 signal

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pre-contrast, we can see there's low signal, but again,

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not to the extent that we see in the fluid of the fourth ventricle.

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When we look at the contrast enhancement,

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there is no, in this case, extension into the IAC.

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It's just not there. Right?

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So, what are those other characteristics we look for?

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Remember, we look at the relationship

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between the mass and the cerebellopontine angle,

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and we can see very nicely,

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unequivocally, that there is this acute angle and

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that tells us that this is not a dural tail.

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And therefore, when we look at the combination of this

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mass that's enhancing, no dural tail,

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heterogeneous T2 signal,

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despite the fact that there's no extension

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into the internal auditory canal,

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this, again, was a schwannoma involving the 7th-8th nerve

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complex and probably arising from the cochlear nerve.

Report

Faculty

Suresh K Mukherji, MD, FACR, MBA

Clinical Professor, University of Illinois & Rutgers University. Faculty, Michigan State University. Director Head & Neck Radiology, ProScan Imaging

Tags

Temporal bone

Skull Base

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Neuroradiology

Neuro

MRI

Idiopathic

Head and Neck

Brain

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