| Literature DB >> 31453078 |
Georges El Hasbani1, Joseph Chirayil2, Sutasinee Nithisoontorn2, Arturo Alvarez Antezana2, Ibrahim El Husseini2, Maria Landaeta2, Yasir Saeed2, Richard Assaker3.
Abstract
Cerebral aspergillosis has the tendency to occur in immunocompromised patients. Less commonly, immunocompetent individuals can be affected, with neuroimaging findings being difficult to interpret. The diagnosis necessitates imaging of the brain as well as the sinuses with biopsy and pathological confirmation. A surgical excision with aggressive antifungal agents are required for a proper management. This case report describes an immunocompetent patient with cerebral aspergillosis that presented radiologically as a suspicious mass to be diagnosed pathologically and excised surgically.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebral aspergillosis; Immunocompetence; Neuroimaging
Year: 2019 PMID: 31453078 PMCID: PMC6700407 DOI: 10.1016/j.mmcr.2019.07.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Mycol Case Rep ISSN: 2211-7539
Fig. 1Axial CT scan of the brain with IV contrast showing vasogenic edema within the right frontal corona radiata and centrum semiovale. Mild mass effect on the frontal horns of both lateral ventricles.
Fig. 2Axial flair sequence of the brain showing vasogenic edema present within the inferomedial right frontal lobe.
Fig. 3Coronal CT scan of the sinuses showing frontal ethmoidal recesses obstructed bilaterally. Moderate opacification of the ethmoid air cells bilaterally is present. Right sphenoid sinus is hypoplastic and moderately opacified. The right sphenoethmoidal recess is obstructed. Complete obstruction of the ostiomeatal units is present bilaterally due to mucosal thickening.
Fig. 4A. H&E photomicrograph showing part of brain parenchyma replaced by granuloma comprising of multiple histiocytic giant cells and lymphocytic infiltrates compatible with inflammation. B. Grocott's methenamine silver stain of fungal hyphae showing branching at acute angle consisting with Aspergillus species.
Case reports in the literature identifying cerebral aspergillosis mimicking a space occupying lesion in immunocompetent patients.
| Case Report | Patient's Characteristics | Findings | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al. [ | A 37-year-old woman was admitted due to dull headache which developed 2 months prior to admission. Left cerebellar meningioma was excised 9 months prior to presentation. | CT and MRI showed an irregular-shaped lesion in the left cerebellar hemisphere, the same location of the previous | Mass was surgically excised. Pathology confirmed presence of |
| Phuttharak et al. [ | A 24-year-old man with a recent diagnosis of tuberculosis but not on immunosuppressive regimen presented with severe headaches that were worse on the left side and had persisted a few months before presentation. | CT and MRI of the brain revealed a large isoattenuated left temporoparieto-occipital mass with an irregular hypoattenuated center and surrounding brain edema with calcifications. | A craniotomy and excisional biopsy. Pathological examination confirmed the diagnosis. The patient received long-term aggressive antifungal drug therapy. |
| Azarpira et al. [ | The clinical symptoms began one year before admission. | An intracranial granuloma due to | Pathology confirmed the diagnosis. Medical antifungal therapy (intravenous amphotericin B) was give, but she failed to respond to these treatments and died. |
| Kumar et al. [ | A 17-year-old female presented with generalized acute headache and diminution of vision had a clinical diagnosis of retro-bulbar neuritis. | Contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (CEMRI) revealed a mass along the right planum sphenoidale with extension into the right sphenoid sinus and the anterior pituitary gland. | Endoscopic trans-sphenoid biopsy and curettage was done. Pathology confirmed the diagnosis. |
| Kumar et al. [ | A 48-year-old female presented with blurring of vision and right-sided body weakness since 4 weeks. She had right frontal headache for 6 months. On examinations, she had right VI nerve palsy and right body weakness. | The CT and MRI imaging features resembled meningioma; but the bone and cavernous sinus invasion were atypical. | The mass lesion was surgically removed through right temporal approach. Histopathology confirmed the diagnosis of aspergilloma. |
| Kumar et al. [ | A 30-year-old young male presented with severe generalized headache, altered sensorium, rhinorrhea, diminishing vision and generalized weakness. | The CT and MRI findings were suggestive of a locally aggressive process possibility representing hematologic malignancy, metastasis or infection possibly fungal or granulomatous in origin. | An endoscopic trans-sphenoidal biopsy was made yielding the diagnosis of |
| Kumar et al. [ | A 50-year-old male presented with right orbital pain and vision disturbance for few months. | The solid T2 hypointense intraorbital intraconal mass simulated a hematologic neoplastic mass (granulocytic sarcoma or lymphoma), especially in association with pachymeningeal enhancement. | Endoscopic trans-sphenoidal biopsy was performed which established the diagnosis of aspergilloma. |
| Pant et al. [ | An immunocompetent 34-year-old male | The mass mimicked a meningioma on preoperative imaging. | Not available |
| Neyaz et al. [ | A 22-year-old-male presented with recurrent attacks of complex partial seizures with secondary generalization for 1 month, headache and blurring of vision with diplopia for 20 days. | MRI showed a large T2 hypointense mass in the right temporal lobe with intense homogeneous postcontrast enhancement. | Right frontotemporal craniotomy excised the mass. |