A craniopharyngioma with spontaneous involution of a gadolinium-enhanced region on magnetic resonance imaging.

Surg Neurol Int

Department of Neurosurgery, Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima 734-8551, Japan.

Published: September 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The case highlights a unique situation where a craniopharyngioma's solid portion involuted on MRI without a change in cyst size.
  • A 44-year-old woman presented with headaches and symptoms leading to the discovery of a suprasellar cyst, initially misdiagnosed as a germ cell tumor.
  • Post-surgery, MRI showed an unexpected shrinkage of the solid enhanced area, suggesting that this region might have been normal hypothalamic tissue affected by the craniopharyngioma rather than tumor growth.

Article Abstract

Background: It has not been reported previously that the solid enhancing portion of a craniopharyngioma has involuted without a change in cyst size.

Case Description: We herein report a case of a craniopharyngioma with spontaneous involution of a solid gadolinium (Gd)-enhanced region on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A 44-year-old female was referred to our department with a mass on MRI associated with headaches and polyuria. The images showed a suprasellar cystic lesion progressing from the posterior pituitary lobe to the right hypothalamus along the pituitary stalk. Examinations of the cerebrospinal fluid showed aseptic meningitis and a positive titer of beta-human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG-β) preoperatively. The hypothalamic lesion became enlarged over the following 3 weeks, and a biopsy of the posterior pituitary lobe was performed via the endonasal transsphenoidal approach under a preoperative diagnosis of a germ cell tumor (GCT). The histological diagnosis was a craniopharyngioma, and the patient's postoperative findings on MRI were atypical: The solid Gd-enhanced region in the hypothalamus had spontaneously decreased in size and the peritumoral edema had improved, although the biopsy site in the posterior pituitary lobe was distant from the area of shrinkage. We speculated that the involutional portion on MRI mimicking a tumor was actually the normal hypothalamus, which was abnormally enhanced due to a disruption of the blood-brain barrier caused by the craniopharyngioma.

Conclusion: Gd-enhanced regions of parenchyma neighboring the cysts of craniopharyngioma should be carefully managed, taking into consideration the possibility of the enhancement of normal tissue.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4168541PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/2152-7806.139377DOI Listing

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