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Neurologic Tumours

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Acoustic Neuroma Acoustic Neuromas usually occur in the middle aged and elderly. They are firm encapsulated tumours which vary greatly in size at presentation. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neurologic Tumours


1
Neurologic Tumours
  • Part 2

2
Choroid Plexus Papilloma
  • Most commonly encountered during the first decade
    of life.
  • This usually arises in the lateral ventricles.
  • Hydrocephalus occurs secondary, with the
    overproduction of CSF
  • CT shows a homogenous, lobulated, isodense or
    hyperdense intraventricular mass.

3
Choroid plexus papilloma of the third ventricle.
Shows a lobulated mass in the third ventricle
extending into the right frontal horn. The mass
is isointense to the surrounding CSF. The lesion
obstructs the third ventricle and produces
hydrocephalus.
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Pituitary Adenoma
  • 12-18 of all intracranial neoplasms.
  • These are usually benign tumours and have a high
    rate of cure with surgery and irradiation.
  • They are usually well encapsulated
  • Symptoms usually present as the result of
    pressure on adjacent tissue due to the presence
    of the lesion.

6
Pituitary Adenoma
  • Vision defects, headaches, seizures and erosion
    render the sella turcica asymmetric and can best
    be seen as a ballooning enlargement on the
    lateral view of the skull.

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Pituitary Adenoma
  • Classified whether or not the tumour is
    endocrinogically active.
  • Because endocrinogically active tumours are
    symptomatic, they tend to present clinically at a
    much smaller size than non-secreting tumours.
    Acromegaly etc.
  • The later may cause symptoms by compression of
    adjacent cerebral nerves.

9
Pituitary Adenomas
  • Tumours smaller than 1 cm are termed
    microadenomas, and show decreased enhancement on
    both CT and MRI compared to the rest of the
    gland.
  • Macroadenomas often extend into the supracellar
    cistern and compress the optic chiasm.
  • Pituitary tumours may encase the adjacent carotid
    arteries and also extend into the cavernous
    sinuses.

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Non secreting adenoma. Mass arising at the
pituitary stalk and extending superiorly and
laterally into the suprasellar cistern.
12
Lateral mass of the pituitary gland. Gadolinium
scan shows encasement of both distal internal
carotid arteries.
13
T1 weighted coronal MRI view demonstrates a
suprasellar macroadenoma of the pituitary in this
37 y.o. man
14
Large pituitary adenoma extending downward into
the right cavernous sinus in a 79 year old woman.
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16
Microadenoma
17
Chordoma
  • Chordomas are tumours that arise from remnants of
    the notochord (embryonic neural tube).
  • Although any part of the vertebral column and
    base of the skull can be involved.
  • The tumours are locally invasive but do not
    metastasize.

18
Chordoma
  • Chordomas arising at the base of the skull
    produce the striking clinical picture of multiple
    cranial nerve palsies on one or both sides
    combined with a retropharyngeal mass and erosion
    of the clivus.
  • On plain films, a chordoma tends to be a bulky
    mass causing ill-defined bone destruction or
    cortical expansion.

19
Chordoma
  • On CT scans , chordomas at the base of the skull
    tend to appear as lesions that are slightly
    denser than brain tissue and often demonstrate
    contrast enhancement.
  • On MRI sagittal scans well demonstrate the clival
    origin of the mass and its effect on surrounding
    structures.

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CT shows a Chordoma as a calcified mass
protruding up from the clivus and deforming the
brainstem.
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23
Clival Chordoma. Sagittal Mri shows a low
intensity multi lobulated mass deforming and
displacing the brainstem, destroying the clivus,
and extending into the sella turcica and
nasopharynx.
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25
Acoustic Neuroma
  • Acoustic Neuromas usually occur in the middle
    aged and elderly.
  • They are firm encapsulated tumours which vary
    greatly in size at presentation.
  • The larger tumours may become irregular and
    lobulated and can become cystic.
  • As a rule they are single solitary tumours.

26
Acoustic Neuroma
  • Large and medium sized acoustic tumours are
    generally isodense and difficult to visualise on
    the unenhanced scan.
  • Rotational deformity of the fourth ventricle
    however may suggest their presence as may
    symmetrical hydrocephalus.
  • Most will show clearly after contrast

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Acoustic Neuroma
  • MRI shows acoustic neuromas very well with or
    without gadolinium.
  • Direct coronal cuts can image both sides at the
    same time and since there is no interference from
    bone, even small tumours can be identified in the
    meatus or extending into it.

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Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumour
  • This actually refers to a group of paediatric
    brain tumours.
  • Most common type is the cerebellar
    medulloblastoma. Another type if the cerebral
    neuroblastoma, which develops during the first
    years of life. Like medulloblastomas, they
    typically have dense cellularity and may be
    hyperdense on unenhanced CT scans.

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Pineal Germinomas
  • Most common type of solid pineal gland tumour
  • When these lesions are large, they may compress
    the midbrain and produce paralysis of upward
    gaze.
  • These tumours are usually developmental
  • More commonly occur in males under 35 y.o.

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34
Craniopharyngioma
  • Benign tumour that contains both cystic and solid
    components.
  • The lesion usually originates above the sella
    turcica, depressing the optic chiasm and
    extending up into the third ventricle.
  • Most craniopharyngiomas have calcification that
    can be detected on plain skull films or CT scans.

35
Rim enhancing lesion that contains dense
calcification and large cystic component that
extends into the posterior fossa. Notice
associated hydrocephalus.
36
Craniopharyngioma. Sagittal MRI scan
demonstrates large multiloculated suprasellar
mass with cystic and lipid components
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