Yukinori Terada1, Hiroki Toda2, Ryosuke Okumura3, Naokado Ikeda1, Yoshiaki Yuba4, Toshiro Katayama5, Koichi Iwasaki1. 1. Department of Neurosurgery, Tazuke Kofukai Medical Research Institute and Kitano Hospital, 2-4-20, Ogimachi, 530-8480, Osaka, Japan. 2. Department of Neurosurgery, Tazuke Kofukai Medical Research Institute and Kitano Hospital, 2-4-20, Ogimachi, 530-8480, Osaka, Japan. htoda-nsu@umin.ac.jp. 3. Department of Radiology, Tazuke Kofukai Medical Research Institute and Kitano Hospital, Osaka, Japan. 4. Department of Pathology, Tazuke Kofukai Medical Research Institute and Kitano Hospital, Osaka, Japan. 5. Department of Medical Health Science, Himeji Dokkyo University, Himeji, Japan.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Microcystic meningioma, a rare meningioma subtype, can present diagnostic difficulty. We aimed to investigate the historadiological properties of microcystic meningioma using conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) analysis. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed conventional MRI and DWI results of six microcystic meningioma cases by examining their appearance and determining their apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values. The ADC values of the intratumoral components were normalized with ADC values of the cerebrospinal fluid in the lateral ventricle (ADC ratios). As cystic formations are frequently associated with microcystic meningiomas, their MRI characteristics were compared with the imaging data from 11 cystic meningiomas of non-microcystic subtypes. RESULTS: We found that cysts in microcystic meningioma tended to have a reticular appearance on DWI, as they did on gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted imaging. Additionally, these reticular cysts had significantly lower ADC ratios than microcystic non-reticular and non-microcystic cysts. These DWI characteristics likely reflect the histological properties of microcystic meningioma. CONCLUSION: A reticular appearance on gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted MRI and DWI, and cyst formation with relatively low ADC values can be diagnostic markers of microcystic meningiomas.
PURPOSE:Microcystic meningioma, a rare meningioma subtype, can present diagnostic difficulty. We aimed to investigate the historadiological properties of microcystic meningioma using conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) analysis. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed conventional MRI and DWI results of six microcystic meningioma cases by examining their appearance and determining their apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values. The ADC values of the intratumoral components were normalized with ADC values of the cerebrospinal fluid in the lateral ventricle (ADC ratios). As cystic formations are frequently associated with microcystic meningiomas, their MRI characteristics were compared with the imaging data from 11 cystic meningiomas of non-microcystic subtypes. RESULTS: We found that cysts in microcystic meningioma tended to have a reticular appearance on DWI, as they did on gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted imaging. Additionally, these reticular cysts had significantly lower ADC ratios than microcystic non-reticular and non-microcystic cysts. These DWI characteristics likely reflect the histological properties of microcystic meningioma. CONCLUSION: A reticular appearance on gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted MRI and DWI, and cyst formation with relatively low ADC values can be diagnostic markers of microcystic meningiomas.