| Literature DB >> 31001031 |
Santosh P V Rai1, Shrijeet Chakraborti2, Parvathi Chandran1, Muralidhar V Pai3.
Abstract
Cavernomas are vascular malformations which are collections of endothelium-lined sinusoids without intervening cerebral parenchyma. Hypothalamic location of cavernoma is extremely rare. We present a case of a 34-year-old male who presented with complaints of recent memory loss and vomiting. On magnetic resonance imaging with gradient sequences and contrast, a diagnosis of hypothalamic cavernoma was suggested. Excision of lesion was performed by a right parasagittal pericoronal craniotomy via transcallosal approach. Intraoperative findings and histopathology examination corroborated the diagnosis. The uniqueness of this case report is in the susceptibility-weighted sequence which led to the radiological diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Cavernous hemangioma; cavernous malformation; hypothalamic
Year: 2019 PMID: 31001031 PMCID: PMC6454944 DOI: 10.4103/jnrp.jnrp_282_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci Rural Pract ISSN: 0976-3155
Figure 1Magnetic resonance imaging showing lesion to be hyperintense on the sagittal T1-weighted (a) and axial T1-weighted images (b), hyperintense with hypointense rim on the axial T2 (c), not showing any significant signal change in the postcontrast axial T1 (d), and showing patchy diffusion restriction (e), and significant blooming on the magnitude (f), phase (g), and fusion (h) images on the susceptibility imaging sequences
Figure 2Intraoperative photograph showing right parasagittal pericoronal craniotomy via transcallosal approach (a) Intraoperatively, this lesion had a typical mulberrylike appearance (b) due to dilated, thinwalled vascular channels
Figure 3(a and b) Small and large cavernous spaces having sclerotic wall, (c) cautery artifact, (d) yellow-brown hemosiderin pigment indicative of past hemorrhage