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Suprasellar Meningioma

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This is a 57-year-old woman with

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a mass that sits around, above,

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and maybe in the pituitary gland.

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The pituitary looks a little juicy, don't

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you think, in the sagittal projection?

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It does.

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Yeah.

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Clearly, though, there's a

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different signal of this component

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compared with the pituitary gland.

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Let's make it even a little bigger.

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And our mass looks completely separate,

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like you could peel it from the brain.

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It doesn't look like it's

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infiltrating the brain.

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So you have to favor, I think,

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an extra-axial location.

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And the real question now is

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Is it involving the pituitary?

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Is it coming from the pituitary?

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Uh, or is it growing down from above?

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I think your first, your

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first impression is what?

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My first impression is that

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it's coming from above.

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The mass is centered right, uh, the

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majority of the mass is centered

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along the planum sphenoidale.

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Yeah, if I put my arrow right in the

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middle of it, right there, I mean, you

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know, that's not where the pituitary is.

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Although, admittedly, this part is,

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gives you some mass effect and the

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pituitary gland looks a little prominent.

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On the axial T2.

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Uh, here is the mass encasing

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the left carotid artery.

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We can scroll up a little bit and see

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just how large and heterogeneous it is.

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It looks like it's, uh, performing some

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compression and defacement of the A1 segment

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of the anterior cerebral artery, along

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with the proximal middle cerebral artery.

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And then as we go down a bit

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towards the pituitary gland, the

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pituitary gland is still big.

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We do see both carotid arteries.

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Then we go to the coronal projection, and

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a lot more information comes into play.

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Um, pay no attention to these, uh, bilateral,

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if you will, these bilateral, territorial, or

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frontotemporal, sphenoidal, sutural meningiomas.

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Uh, they're typical, you know, they

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have that linear, uh, growth pattern on

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both sides, that dural growth pattern

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with a little bit of a dural tail.

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Let's focus on this lesion right here.

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It is very intimate with the upper border of the

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pituitary gland, but you can separate it from

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the stalk, and you can actually separate it,

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if you look very carefully, I'm gonna make it

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even bigger, from the pituitary gland itself.

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Sometimes we use a little structure called the

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pituitary tuft, which I don't see very well

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here, which is a tuft of vessels in the middle

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of the gland to see if the gland is infiltrated.

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Um, it's not, although it would be nice

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to see the tuft directly in the midline.

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Still, our lesion is above it. There's a

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plane of separation, right there, between

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our lesion and the pituitary gland.

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And then our lesion is growing over

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the carotid siphon, but is it, is

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it entering the cavernous sinus?

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That's an important question.

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What do you think?

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I think it's sitting right

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above the cavernous sinus.

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Yeah, I mean, the cavernous sinus would be

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more down in here. I mean, that's probably

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one of the cranial nerves, maybe the third

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cranial nerve, right there. These little

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speckles are located in the cavernous sinus.

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And when you have infiltration, you'll

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lose that normal speckled appearance of

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the nerves that course through there.

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Uh, nerve 3, V1, first branch of

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trigeminal nerve, V2, second branch of

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trigeminal nerve, the 6th nerve, and so on.

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So, the speckling of this area is preserved.

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We don't have bulging along

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the lateral dural wall.

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We don't actually see the mass go into the dura.

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We don't see it circumscribing

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the carotid artery.

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We don't see it on the lateral

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side of the carotid artery.

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All of those signs mitigating against the

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diagnosis of cavernous sinus invasion.

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Now we're in the anterior cranial fossa.

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And, and you can get some really

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impressive bone changes there.

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What are some of the bone changes

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that are associated with big anterior

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cranial fossa, uh, meningiomas?

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There's one in particular I know you like.

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Yeah, so one thing that can happen is, uh,

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you get an intense hyperostatic reaction,

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which can retract some

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of the bone and lead to a

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thing called pneumosinus dilatans.

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Uh, typically this happens only with the

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floor of the anterior cranial fossa meningiomas.

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So what is pneumosinus dilatans?

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Sounds fancy.

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It is fancy.

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It's actually all it is is just

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extension or expansion of the

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sinuses due to the bone.

4:01

Sure.

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And, and, you know, as radiologists, you

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probably learned about that in the

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syndrome known as Dyke Davidoff Mason syndrome,

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uh, but we'll set that aside right now.

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Pneumosinus dilatans is

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associated with that condition.

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Uh, the brain is

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often smaller on that side.

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And they may or may not have seizures.

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So you don't think about pneumosinus

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dilatans associated with meningioma.

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Um, you can get lytic lesions.

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You can get, as you said, hyperostatic

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lesions that can mimic Paget's

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disease or fibrous dysplasia.

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And those are in the differential diagnosis.

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Now if we just stop for a moment

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and we look at the table.

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So I'm gonna, I'm gonna take the

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table of the skull right here.

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Here's the inner table right there.

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Here's the outer table, and then in

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between we have the diploic space,

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which I'm going to make orange.

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So now I got orange in the

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middle, and the diploic space.

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So what does meningioma typically do?

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Well, classically, it will

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hit the inner table.

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And I'm using gray here because

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you see it kind of blends with the brain.

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That's not the only type of

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hyperostosis you can get.

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You can actually get it on both sides.

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So you wipe out that thin,

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dark line of the outer table.

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And it just becomes this large

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gray or dark gray area and starts

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to encroach on the diploic space.

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There are times when it will actually

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completely wipe out the diploic space too.

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And there's also a scenario where it can even

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be in the diploic space and spare both tables.

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So you could have something like this.

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Outer table, inner table.

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And the inner table is spared, yet

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the meningioma itself creates a reaction

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in the diploic space, usually a sclerotic

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one, and spares the tables themselves.

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So those are some pretty interesting

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variations that occur with meningioma.

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And when you get this, it

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looks like a sclerotic met.

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When you get that, it looks like

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some lesion that's wiping its way

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through the calvarium, and

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it makes you worried about more aggressive

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things like lymphoma, melanoma, and

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hemangiopericytoma, and metastases.

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So let's move on from this very interesting

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case, a skull-based meningioma with a

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few daughter meningiomas in the petroclival

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regions and take on something else, shall we?

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Let's do it.

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Okay.

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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