| Literature DB >> 23378871 |
Hector N Aguilar1, Ryan W Hung, Vivek Mehta, Trevor Kotylak.
Abstract
Angiocentric gliomas have recently been reclassified as a separate central nervous system tumor. Few cases have been reported, and most of those correspond to slow-growing, low-grade neoplasms in very young pediatric patients. Here we describe magnetic resonance imaging findings (including diffusion imaging, spectroscopy and tractography) in an unusual higher-grade neoplasm with pathologic features suggestive of an angiocentric glioma in a 15-year-old male. The tumor had mild heterogeneous enhancement on magnetic resonance imaging, and a low apparent diffusion coefficient (9.9 × 10(-4) mm(2)s(-1)), consistent with an intermediate-to-high cellularity tumor. Spectroscopic imaging showed elevated choline/phosphocreatine and choline/N-acetyl aspartate ratios, suggesting an unusually aggressive tumor. We conclude that angiocentric glioma should not be excluded from consideration at primary diagnosis, particularly in teenaged patients nearing adulthood.Entities:
Keywords: MR imaging; MR spectroscopy; MR tractography; angiocentric glioma; diffusion tensor imaging
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23378871 PMCID: PMC3558271 DOI: 10.3941/jrcr.v6i10.1134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiol Case Rep ISSN: 1943-0922