| Literature DB >> 35145173 |
Dima Z Jamjoom1, Ali Alamer2, Donatella Tampieri3.
Abstract
Epidermoid cysts are benign congenital extra-axial lesions commonly found in the posterior fossa. These lesions have a characteristic imaging appearance on computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), but occasionally they may exhibit atypical radiological features, showing unusual hyperintensity on T1-weighted images (T1WI). Currently, such atypical appearance is referred to as white epidermoid. We present the imaging features of 5 cases of white epidermoid cyst and discuss the possible underlying etiology of this unusual radiological appearance. We retrospectively searched our electronic radiology database from January 2005 to December 2015 for all intracranial epidermoid cysts, which were confirmed either by typical MRI appearance or histopathological examination. All white epidermoid cases were evaluated with non-enhanced CT scan and multisequential MRI. Histopathological correlation was carried out in four white epidermoid cases. A total of 61 patients with epidermoid cyst were found, of those 5 (8%) were considered white epidermoids. These consisted of 3 females and 2 males, ranging in age between 31-63 years (average age was 51.8 years). Three patients had lesions located in the posterior fossa. The 2 other patients had lesions in the suprasellar region, with extension to the right middle cranial fossa in one. All 5 lesions were hyperdense on CT scan and hyperintense on T1WI. One patient demonstrated evidence of transformation of a classic epidermoid to a white epidermoid after partial resection. Histopathologically, cholesterol clefts were seen in 3 epidermoid cysts, each which also showed microcalcifications, proteinaceous material or melanin. Hemorrhage was demonstrated in one additional lesion. White epidermoid cyst is an unusual intracranial lesion that should be considered when encountered with an extra-axial T1 hyperintense lesion. The cause of this hyperintensity is not clearly understood, but the presence of cholesterol, microcalcifications, proteinaceous content and rarely hemorrhage or melanin may be contributing factors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35145173 PMCID: PMC8831518 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-06167-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Plain CT scan images of the brain of the 5 patients with white epidermoid cyst. The lesions exhibit variable spontaneous hyperdensity. Patient 1 (A) has a lesion in the posterior fossa in the retrocerebellar region (black asterisk) with a small focus of peripheral calcification. Patient 2 (B) presents with a sellar/suprasellar hyperdense lesions (white star). Patient 3 (C) has an epidermoid cyst with 2 components: classic epidermoid (white arrows) in the suprasellar region and white epidermoid (black asterisk) in the right middle cranial fossa, which developed after partial resection. Patient 4 (D) presents with a lesion located in the posterior fossa anteriorly, extending to the craniocervical junction (black arrowheads). Patient 5 (E) has a foramen magnum epidermoid cyst with extension to the spinal canal (black asterisk).
Figure 2Non-enhanced T1-weighted MR images of the brain demonstrate spontaneously hyperintense white epidermoid cysts. Patients 1, 4 and 5 (A,D,E) have lesions in the posterior fossa, with extension to spinal canal in patients 4 (black arrowheads) and 5 (black asterisk). Patient 2 (B) presents with a sellar/suprasellar lesion (black star). The lesion in patient 3 (C) has 2 components: classic epidermoid posteriorly (white arrows) and white epidermoid anteriorly (black asterisk).
Figure 3(A,B) Axial nonenhanced T1-weighted MRI in patient 3, which shows evidence of transformation of a residual classic epidermoid cyst in the suprasellar cistern and right middle cranial fossa (white arrows in A) to a white epidermoid (black asterisk in B). The interpeduncular component retained its classis epidermoid features (white arrow in B). The 2 images are taken 10 years apart. (C,D) Axial T2WI and ADC map demonstrating different signal intensities of the white epidermoid component (black asterisk) and classic epidermoid cyst (black arrow). The white epidermoid cyst shows intermediate signal intensity on T2WI and high signal intensity on the ADC map, indicating lack of diffusion restriction, in contrast to the classic epidermoid, which demonstrates high T2 signal intensity and diffusion restriction.
Patient demographics, clinical presentation, lesion imaging features and histopathological correlation.
| No. | Age | Gender | History | Location | CT scan | T1WI | T2WI | Histopathology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 63 | Female | Headache, ataxia and dysmetria | Posterior fossa (retrocerebellar) | Hyperdense (72.67 HU) | Hyperintense | Markedly hypointense | Epidermoid cyst with microcalcifications and cholesterol clefts |
| 2 | 59 | Male | Hypopituitarism and progressive vision loss | Sellar/suprasellar | Hyperdense (54.15 HU) | Hyperintense | Markedly hypointense | Epidermoid cyst with hemorrhage |
| 3 | 63 | Male | Previous resection of a classic epidermoid cyst | Suprasellar/right middle cranial fossa with extension to the posterior fossa | Hyperdense (49.14 HU). The posterior fossa component is hypodense | Hyperintense. The posterior fossa component is hypointense | Isointense. The posterior fossa component is hyperintense | Classic epidermoid cyst. The white epidermoid component was not resected |
| 4 | 31 | Female | Headache | Posterior fossa with extension to the craniocervical junction | Hyperdense (49.96 HU) | Hyperintense | Hypointense | Epidermoid with melanin, cholesterol clefts, multinucleated giant cells and lymphocytic infiltrates |
| 5 | 43 | Female | Headache | Posterior fossa (foramen magnum) with caudal extension into the spinal canal | Hyperdense (49.31 HU) | Hyperintense | Markedly hypointense | Epidermoid with cholesterol clefts and proteinaceous material |