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Perineural Spread in a Large Cell Undifferentiated Carcinoma

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Let's look at another example of perineural spread.

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In this case, by a large cell undifferentiated carcinoma

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of the parotid gland.

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This is likely a case of squamous cell carcinoma

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of the parotid gland, which I'll get to

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momentarily that dedifferentiated.

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So here we have the parotid gland,

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which is infiltrated.

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It has both a superficial as well as

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a deep portion that is infiltrated.

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You can see that it extends into the parapharyngeal

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space fat. The normal bright signal intensity here

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has been infiltrated, and as we go up superiorly, you

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can see that there has already been

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a temporal bone resection here.

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But there looks like there's a tumor that's

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going through the stylomastoid foramen.

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Not only that,

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but as we scroll superiorly in the region of the

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expected location of the foramen ovale, you see soft

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tissue present, and here you can see that the foramen

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ovale is infiltrated, and the tumor is

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actually coming along the Meckel's cave.

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So here's our carotid artery,

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here's our lower portion of the Meckel's cave on the

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left side, and here we have the

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tumor extending into the

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trigeminal impression, and from there into the

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cavernous sinus. Oh my goodness, look at this.

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Not only is it growing into the cavernous sinus,

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it's growing posteriorly into the basal cisterns and

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compressing the brainstem as it continues

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to grow along the fifth cranial nerve.

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So I'm going to show you this on the T2-weighted

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scan just to point out that it's going to be

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intermediate to dark in signal intensity and

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not bright and therefore needs biopsy.

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This patient already had the diagnosis of large

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cell undifferentiated carcinoma on the T1

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post-contrast scan. You see the avid enhancement of

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the tissue which has grown through the

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foramen ovale into Meckel's cave,

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into the cavernous sinus, and into the prepontine

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cistern on the right side.

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This little structure here is a vein;

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you can ignore that.

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But I wanted to show this case also in the coronal plane.

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Here we are in the coronal plane, and note the

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marked enlargement of the foramen ovale.

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Here's the normal foramen ovale, and here we

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have the marked enlargement of the foramen ovale.

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We have Meckel's cave on the left side,

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the normal side.

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Here's Meckel's cave on the abnormal side, and

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if we continue into the cavernous sinus,

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here's our normal cavernous sinus region.

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Here's the tumor infiltrating the

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cavernous sinus and actually displacing

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the cavernous carotid artery medially.

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This is pretty gross.

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Involvement of the third division of the fifth

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cranial nerve via the auriculotemporal nerve

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by large cell undifferentiated carcinoma,

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which grew into the basal cisterns.

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Here again, this is just a vein,

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so we can ignore that.

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I thought I saw some involvement of

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the 7th cranial nerve as well, but that's not panning out so

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much on the coronals at all.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Skull Base

Salivary Glands

Neuroradiology

Neoplastic

MRI

Head and Neck

Brain

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