| Literature DB >> 32561982 |
Natalie Winter1, Maike F Dohrn2, Julia Wittlinger1, Alexander Loizides3, Hannes Gruber3, Alexander Grimm4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Peripheral nerve sheath tumors are hallmark findings in neurofibromatosis types 1 and 2. With increasing size, they typically lead to neurological symptoms, and NF1 patients have a lifetime risk of 8-13% for developing malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors. Medical imaging is therefore highly needed for early detection and exact localization of symptomatic or potentially malignant tumors. This review will give an overview of the ultrasound characteristics of peripheral nerve sheath tumors and findings in patients with neurofibromatosis types 1 and 2.Entities:
Keywords: High resolution nerve ultrasound; Neurofibroma; Neurofibromatosis; Schwannoma
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32561982 PMCID: PMC7575466 DOI: 10.1007/s00381-020-04718-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Childs Nerv Syst ISSN: 0256-7040 Impact factor: 1.475
Typical ultrasound characteristics of benign and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor
| Benign | Malignant (MPNST) | |
|---|---|---|
| Tumor size | < 5 cm | > 5 cm (> 3.3 cm) |
| Growth rate | Slowly growing, years | Fast-growing within weeks to months |
| Margins | Well-defined | Irregular, ill-defined |
| Peritumoral edema | Not present | Present |
| Echogenicity and echotexture | Homogenous “ancient” schwannoma: hyperechoic areas, cysts, calcification | Inhomogeneous, calcification, cysts, central necrosis, hemorrhage |
| Localization in relation to the nerve | Schwannoma: more eccentric, displacement of fascicles Neurofibroma: concentric, “interfere” with fascicles | Infiltrative |
| Vascularization | Hierarchic, good vascularization (schwannomas), poor vascularization (neurofibromas) | Stenosis, occlusion, trifurcation, archaic vascular pattern |
| CEUS | No enhancement, homogenous enhancement (more common in schwannomas) | Peripherally enhancing + non-enhancing central area or diffusely enhancing mass + scattered non-enhancing areas and/or enhancement bridges |
CEUS, contrast-enhanced ultrasonography; MPNST, malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor
Fig. 1Color-mode image of a schwannoma. The ovoid, mostly hypoechoic tumor with its clear borders, arising from one fascicle, is the hallmark finding in peripheral NF2 nerves. However, a schwannoma can also be seen in other patients and occur as single lesion. Large tumors are mostly traversed by many vessels with regular blood flow
Fig. 2Neurofibromas are more heterogeneous than schwannomas with often mixed echointensity. Their borders are sharply delimited, but the lump-like shape is not as well-defined as in schwannomas. In contrast to schwannomas, several fascicles are involved (asterisks)
Fig. 3Tremendous growth of a lump-like mass, infiltrative aspects, changed vascularity, and random heterogeneity must raise attention to malignancy. In this figure, ultrasound (a) and corresponding MRI images (b; short TI inversion recovery (STIR)–weighted sequence of the same tumor, sagittal plane) of a malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor in NF1 are shown
Fig. 4Plexiform neurofibroma in a patient with NF1 in the long axis. The serpentine-like neurofibromas are marked with asterisks