| Literature DB >> 27368037 |
Zhi-Gang Tan1, Qian Zhou, Yan Cui, Lei Yi, Yian Ouyang, Yugang Jiang.
Abstract
Isolated cerebral varix is a rare cerebrovascular anomaly, which is easily misdiagnosed as other brain tumors.A 59-year-old female patient with noncontributory medical history presented with headache and insomnia for the last 2 months. Upon admission, her neurological examination was unremarkable. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a well-demarcated extra medullary mass, 11 × 11 mm in size, within the subdural space at the right frontal lobe. The lesion was initially interpreted as a convexity meningioma. After conducting a craniotomy on the patient, an extra-axial varix was exposed and resected subsequently. The patient's headache was resolved soon after surgery and charged without neurologic sequelae.Extra-axial isolated cerebral varix is mimicking convexity meningioma on MR images and should be considered as a differential diagnosis. The focal erosion in the inner table of the skull could be an important character of extra-axial isolated cerebral varix. An extremely round shape and smooth contour of the lesion was another important character. Isolated cerebral varix is rare vascular lesion that is treated surgically in the case of rupture or compression of adjacent structures. The information obtained with noninvasive imaging techniques should include CTA to make a clinical decision.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27368037 PMCID: PMC4937951 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000004047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.889
Figure 1Preoperative magnetic resonance images postcontrast images revealed a rounded lesion on the axial T1-weighted image (arrow, A) and the spindle-shaped on sagittal image (arrow, D), with homogeneous-marked enhancement in the right frontal convexity. It is isointense with gray matter on the T1-wighted image (arrow, B) and had slightly hyperintensity on the T2-wighted image (arrow, C).
Figure 2Intraoperative exposure of the isolate cerebral varix and postoperative CT image. A focal dilatation of the convexity vein was found. It has the filling stage (A) and the loose stage (B), which prompts the press on the surrounding cortex, dura and the inner table of skull. No signs of venous congestion or brain tissue edema were observed in the CT image 24 h after the surgery (C). CT, computed tomography.