| Literature DB >> 34040309 |
Sumati Sundaraiya1, Adhithyan Rajendran2, Abubacker Sulaiman2, Sivakumar Pradeep3, Sivakumar Vidhyadharan3, Naveen Hedne3.
Abstract
A 50-year-old man with carcinoma of the right buccal mucosa underwent staging whole-body 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography-computed tomography, which revealed a hypermetabolic heterogeneously enhancing lobulated primary lesion in the right buccal region and an incidental finding of subacute stroke. The case highlights the importance of discriminating brain neoplasms mimicking stroke from true ischemic stroke, which is crucial for appropriate management of patients in an oncology setting. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Hypermetabolic peri-ischemia; hypometabolic ischemic core; ischemic stroke; stroke masquerading brain tumors
Year: 2021 PMID: 34040309 PMCID: PMC8130700 DOI: 10.4103/ijnm.IJNM_171_20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nucl Med ISSN: 0974-0244
Figure 118F-Fluorodeoxyglucose PET– CT showing intensely hypermetabolic (SUVmax: 15.86) heterogeneously enhancing lobulated soft-tissue density lesion in the right buccal region (a and b) and metabolically active ipsilateral cervical nodal deposits (c)
Figure 2(a-f) 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography–computed tomography showing an incidental finding of metabolically inactive hypodense area noted in the right parieto-occipital region with irregular fluorodeoxyglucose-avid cortical gyral enhancement in the right parietal and right frontoparietal regions
Figure 3Magnetic resonance imaging showing T2 fluid-attenuated inversion recovery hyperintensity (II) involving the right middle cerebral artery–posterior cerebral artery cortical watershed zone and right frontal parasagittal internal watershed zone, with gyral enhancement and diffusion hyperintensity (Ia) with normal apparent diffusion coefficient (Ib). Arterial spin labeling showing hypoperfusion (IV) in the right cerebral watershed zones. Magnetic resonance angiography (v), showing focal severe narrowing of the right cavernous internal carotid artery anterior segment and severe narrowing of bilateral vertebral artery, with eccentric wall thickening and enhancement in three-dimensional T1 sequence (VI a and b). Magnetic resonance perfusion showing increased mean transit time and time to peak in the right cerebral watershed zones (III)