Objective: the study objective was to improve the quality of detection of medulloblastoma metastases.
Material And Methods: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the spinal cord in a child with medulloblastoma of the posterior cranial fossa, which was performed on the first day after surgery, detected contrast-positive thickenings of the meninges in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spinal cord that might be erroneously diagnosed as metastasis. These lesions spontaneously regressed within 3 weeks, which was verified by control MRI.
Conclusion: In the case of misinterpretation of a MRI picture of contrast-positive thickenings of the meninges, a patient is erroneously regarded as having tumor metastases and is subject to more intensive treatment. However, the lesions spontaneously disappear or greatly reduce after 2-3 weeks. The article presents a case of this phenomenon, describes the putative mechanisms of its development, and provides recommendations for its differential diagnosis from metastases.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.17116/neiro201579572-76 | DOI Listing |
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