1 Brain and Extra-axial Lesions(Table 1.1 – Table 1.2)



10.1055/b-0034-75767

1 Brain and Extra-axial Lesions(Table 1.1 – Table 1.2)

















































































































Table 1.1 Congenital malformations of the brain

Lesions


CT Findings


Comments


Disorders of diverticulation (formation of cerebral hemispheres and ventricles)


Holoprosencephaly


Alobar: Large monoventricle with posterior midline cyst, lack of hemisphere formation with absence of falx, corpus callosum, and septum pellucidum. Fused thalami. Can be associated with facial anomalies (facial clefts, arrhinia, hypotelorism, and cyclops).


Fig. 1.2


Semilobar: Monoventricle with partial formation of interhemispheric fissure, occipital and temporal horns, and partially fused thalami. Absent corpus callosum and septum pellucidum. Associated with mild craniofacial anomalies.


Fig. 1.3a, b


Lobar: Near complete formation of interhemispheric fissure and ventricles. Fused inferior portions of frontal lobes, dysgenesis of corpus callosum with formation of posterior portion without anterior portion, malformed frontal horns of lateral ventricles, absence of septum pellucidum, separate thalami, and neuronal migration disorders.


Fig. 1.4a, b


Syntelencephaly (middle interhemispheric variant): Partial formation of interhemispheric fissure in the anterior and occipital regions with fusion of the portions of the upper frontal and/or parietal lobes. Genu and splenium of the corpus callosum can be observed with a focal defect in the body.


Holoprosencephaly: Spectrum of diverticulation disorders that occur during weeks 4 to 6 of gestation characterized by absent or partial cleavage and differentiation of the embryonic cerebrum (prosencephalon) into hemispheres and lobes. Causes include maternal diabetes, fetal genetic abnormalities such as trisomy 16 (Patau syndrome), and trisomy 18 (Edwards syndrome). Familial holoprosencephaly: mutations of HPE1 on chromosome 21q22.3, HPE2 on 2p21, HPE3 on 7q36, HPE4 on 18p, and HPE5 on 13q32. Clinical manifestations depend on the severity of the malformation and include early death, seizures, mental retardation, facial dysmorphism, and developmental delay. Patients with syntelencephaly often have mild to moderate cognitive dysfunction, spasticity, and mild visual impairment.


Septo-optic dysplasia (de Morsier syndrome)


Dysgenesis/hypoplasia or agenesis of septum pellucidum, optic nerve hypoplasia, and squared frontal horns; association with schizencephaly in 50% of patients. Optic canals are often small. May be associated with schizencephaly and gray matter heterotopia.


Patients can have nystagmus, decreased visual acuity, and hypothalamic-pituitary disorders (decreased thyroid stimulating hormone and/or growth hormone). Clinical exam shows small optic discs. May be sporadic from in utero insults or from abnormal genetic expression from mutations (HESX1 gene on chromo-some 3p21.1–3p21.2) during formation of the basal prosencephalon. Some findings overlap those of mild lobar holoprosencephaly.


Arrhinia/arrhinencephaly


Fig. 1.5a–d


Absence of olfactory lobes and sulci. Other anomalies may be seen involving the corpus callosum, hypothalamus, and pituitary gland.


Arrhinia refers to the absence of nose formation; arrhinencephaly refers to the congenital absence of the olfactory lobes. Typically associated with other congenital craniofacial anomalies such as cleft palate/lip, hypertelorism, and hypoplasia of the nasal cavity. Considered to result from insult in utero or genetic mutation.


Neuronal migration disorders


Lissencephaly (agyria or “smooth brain”)


Fig. 1.6a, b


Absent or incomplete formation of gyri and sulci with shallow sylvian fissures and “figure 8” appearance of brain on axial images, abnormally thick cortex, and gray matter heterotopia with smooth gray-white matter interface.


Severe disorder of neuronal migration (occurs during weeks 7–16 of gestation) with absent or incomplete formation of gyri, sulci, and sylvian fissures. Typically in association with microcephaly (defined as head circumference 3 standard deviations below normal). Associated with severe mental retardation, developmental delay, seizures, and early death. Other associated CNS anomalies are dysgenesis of the corpus callosum, microcephaly, hypoplastic thalami, and cephaloceles. Associated with mutations at LIS gene at 17p13.3, chromosome 17 (Miller-Dieker syndrome); DCX gene at Xq22.3-q23; and RELN gene at 7q22.


Pachygyria (nonlissencephalic cortical dysplasia)


Thick gyri with shallow sulci involving all or portions of the brain. Thickened cortex with relatively smooth gray-white interface may have areas of low attenuation in the white matter (gliosis).


Severe disorder of neuronal migration with etiologies similar to lissencephaly. Clinical findings related to degree of extent of this malformation.


Gray matter heterotopia


Laminar heterotopia appears as a band or bands of gray matter attenuation within the cerebral white matter.


Fig. 1.7a, b


Nodular heterotopia appears as one or more nodules of gray matter attenuation along the ventricles or within the cerebral white matter.


Fig. 1.8


Fig. 1.9a, b


Focal subcortical heterotopia can be seen as irregular nodular or multinodular masslike zones with gray matter attenuation in subcortical regions.


Fig. 1.9


Disorder of neuronal migration (weeks 7–22 of gestation) in which a collection or layer of neurons is located between the ventricles and cerebral cortex. Can have a bandlike (laminar) or nodular appearance isodense to gray matter; may be unilateral or bilateral. Associated with seizures and schizencephaly.


Schizencephaly (split brain)


Fig. 1.10a, b


Uni- or bilateral clefts in the brain extending from the ventricle to cortical surface lined by gray matter heterotopia, which may be polymicrogyric. The clefts may be narrow (closed lips) or wide (open lips).


Association with seizures, blindness, retardation, and other CNS anomalies (septo-optic dysplasia, etc.). Clinical manifestations related to severity of malformation. Ischemia or insult to portion or germinal matrix before hemisphere formation.


Unilateral hemimegalencephaly


Fig. 1.11


Nodular or multinodular region of gray matter heterotopia involving all or part of a cerebral hemisphere with associated enlargement of the ipsilateral lateral ventricle and hemisphere.


Neuronal migration disorder associated with hamartomatous overgrowth of a portion of or the whole hemisphere.


Dysgenesis of the corpus callosum


Fig. 1.12 a, b


Fig. 1.13a, b


Spectrum of abnormalities ranging from complete to partial absence of the corpus callosum. Widely separated and parallel orientations of frontal horns and bodies of the lateral ventricles, high position of the third ventricle in relation to the interhemispheric fissure, and colpocephaly. Associated with interhemispheric cysts, lipomas, and anomalies such as Chiari II malformation, gray matter heterotopia, Dandy-Walker malformation, holoprosencephaly, azygous anterior cerebral artery, and cephaloceles.


Failure or incomplete formation of corpus callosum (7–18 wk of gestation). Axons that normally cross from one hemisphere to the other are aligned parallel along the medial walls of lateral ventricles (bundles of Probst).


Malformations in cerebral cortical development


Polymicrogyria


Fig. 1.14a–c


Multiple small gyri occur unilaterally (40%), bilaterally (60%), and often in the region of the sylvian fissures. On CT, the small gyri may appear as zones of thickened cortex.


Malformation in late stages of neuronal migration resulting in abnormal neuronal organization of the brain cortex. Sites involved lack a normal six-layered cerebral cortex associated with abnormal sulcation.


Focal cortical dysplasia


Fig. 1.15


Nodular superficial zone with gray matter attenuation.


Malformation in late stages of neuronal migration resulting in a focal region of abnormal neuronal organization of the brain cortex. Can be associated with seizures.


Neural tube closure disorders


Chiari I malformation


Fig. 1.16


Cerebellar tonsils extend > 5 mm below the foramen magnum in adults, 6 mm in children younger than 10 y. Syringohydromyelia in 20% to 40% of cases, hydrocephalus in 25%, basilar impression in 25%. Less common association: Klippel-Feil syndrome and atlanto-occipital assimilation.


Cerebellar tonsillar ectopia. Most common anomaly of CNS. Not associated with myelomeningocele.


Chiari II malformation (Arnold-Chiari)


Fig. 1.17


Small posterior cranial fossa with gaping foramen magnum through which there is an inferiorly positioned vermis associated with a cervicomedullary kink. Beaked dorsal margin of the tectal plate. Myelomeningoceles in all patients. Hydrocephalus and syringomyelia common. Dilated lateral ventricles posteriorly (colpocephaly).


Complex anomaly involving the cerebrum, cerebellum, brainstem, spinal cord, ventricles, skull, and dura. Failure of fetal neural folds to close properly, resulting in altered development affecting multiple sites of the CNS.


Chiari III malformation


Features of Chiari II plus lower occipital or high cervical encephalocele.


Rare anomaly associated with high mortality.


Cephaloceles (meningoceles or meningoencephaloceles)


Fig. 1.18a, b


Fig. 1.19a, b


Fig. 1.20


Defect in skull through which there is either herniation of meninges and CSF (meningocele) or meninges, CSF, and brain tissue (meningoencephaloceles).


Congenital malformation involving lack of separation of neuroectoderm from surface ectoderm with resultant localized failure of bone formation. Occipital location most common in Western hemisphere, frontoethmoidal location most common site in Southeast Asians. Other sites include parietal and sphenoid bones. Cephaloceles can also result from trauma or surgery.


Cerebellar hypoplasia


Chiari II with vanishing cerebellum


Intracranial findings of Chiari II with complete or near complete absence of the cerebellum.


Myeloceles in Chiari II malformations may rarely be associated with in utero destruction of the fetal cerebellum.


Hypoplasia of cerebellar hemisphere


Hypoplasia or absence of a cerebellar hemisphere.


In utero insult causing loss of formative cerebellar cells from ischemia or apoptosis.


Dandy-Walker malformation


Fig. 1.21a, b


Vermian aplasia or severe hypoplasia, communication of fourth ventricle with retrocerebellar cyst, hypoplasia of cerebellar hemispheres, enlarged posterior fossa, and high position of tentorium and transverse venous sinuses. Hydrocephalus common. Associated with other anomalies, such as dysgenesis of the corpus callosum, gray matter heterotopia, schizencephaly, holoprosencephaly, and cephaloceles.


Abnormal formation of the roof of the fourth ventricle with absent or near incomplete formation of the cerebellar vermis.


Vermian hypoplasia (also referred to as “Dandy-Walker variant”)


Mild vermian hypoplasia with communication of posteroinferior portion of the fourth ventricle with cisterna magna. No associated enlargement of the posterior cranial fossa.


Occasionally associated with hydrocephalus, dysgenesis of the corpus callosum, gray matter heterotopia, and other anomalies.


Cerebellar dysplastic malformations


Joubert syndrome


Small dysplastic vermis with midline cleft between ap-posing cerebellar hemispheres, “molar tooth” axial appearance from small midbrain, and thickened superior cerebellar peduncles.


Malformation with hypoplasia of vermis, dysplasia and heterotopia of cerebellar nuclei, lack of decussation of superior cerebellar peduncles, and near complete absence of medullary pyramids. Clinical: ataxia, mental retardation, and abnormal eye movements.


Rhombencephalosynapsis


Dysmorphic cerebellum with no apparent separation of cerebellar hemispheres, aplasia, or severe hypoplasia of vermis.


Malformation with fusion of cerebellar hemispheres, dentate nuclei, and superior cerebellar peduncles; absent or hypoplastic vermis. Clinical: truncal ataxia, cerebral palsy, mental retardation, and seizures.


Lhermitte-Duclos disease


Fig. 1.22a, b


Poorly defined zone of low and intermediate attenuation with laminated appearance and localized mass effect located in the cerebellum. No enhancement.


Uncommon cerebellar dysplasia with gross thickening of cerebellar folia and disorganized cellular structure.

Fig. 1.2 Alobar holoprosencephaly. Axial image after ventricular shunting shows the absence of interhemispheric fis-sure and the lack of cerebral and cerebellar lobe formation.
Fig. 1.3a, b Semilobar holoprosencephaly. Axial images show fusion of the anterior portion of the brain with the presence of only the posterior portion of the interhemispheric fissure.
Fig. 1.4a, b Lobar holoprosencephaly. Axial images show fusion of the inferior portions of the frontal lobes. The other portions of the frontal lobes are separated, as are the parietal and occipital lobes.
Fig. 1.5a–d Arrhinia. Oblique coronal (a,b), parasagittal (c), and axial (d) images show the lack of formation of the nasal bones and severe hypoplasia of the nasal cavity.
Fig. 1.6a, b Lissencephaly. Axial images show the complete lack of gyral formation.
Fig. 1.7a, b Gray matter heterotopia, band type. Axial CT (a) image shows a band of intermediate attenuation representing the gray matter heterotopia, which is well seen on the axial proton density-weighted magnetic resonance image (MRI) (arrows) (b).
Fig. 1.8 Gray matter heterotopia, nodular ependymal type. Axial image shows nodular zones with gray matter attenuation along the margins of the lateral ventricles.
Fig. 1.9a, b Gray matter heterotopia, subcortical masslike type. Axial CT image (a) shows a masslike zone with gray matter attenuation involving the anterior left frontal lobe, as seen on the axial T2-weighted MRI (b).
Fig. 1.10a, b Schizencephaly, open lip type. Axial CT (a) and T2-weighted (b) images show large zones of communication between the lateral ventricles and subarachnoid space that are lined with gray matter.
Fig. 1.11 Unilateral hemimegalencephaly. Axial image shows enlargement of the left cerebral hemisphere with abnormally thickened cerebral cortex and gyri.
Fig. 1.12a, b Dysgenesis of the corpus callosum. Axial images show the absence of the corpus callosum with widely separated lateral ventricles.
Fig. 1.13a, b Lipoma of the corpus callosum. Axial (a) and sagittal (b) images show a lipoma with calcifications involving the anterior portion of the corpus callosum (arrow).
Fig. 1.14a–c Polymicrogyria. Axial CT images (a,b) and axial T2-weighted MRI (c) show numerous small gyri.
Fig. 1.15 Cortical dysplasia. Axial image shows abnormal cortical thickening involving the right frontal and parietal lobes (arrow).
Fig. 1.16 Chiari I malformation. Sagittal image shows extension of the cerebellar tonsils below the foramen magnum to the level of the posterior arch of C1.
Fig. 1.17 Chiari II malformation. Sagittal image shows extension of the cerebellum through the foramen magnum, as well as a malformed fourth ventricle, dysgenesis of the corpus callosum, and a ventricular shunt catheter.
Fig. 1.18a, b Parietal-occipital meningoencephalocele. Sagittal (a) and axial (b) images show a bone defect through which brain and meninges extend superficially.
Fig. 1.19a, b Frontal meningoencephalocele. Axial (a) and coronal (b) images show a bone defect through which brain and meninges extend superficially.
Fig. 1.20 Ethmoid meningocele. Coronal image shows a bone defect at the right cribriform plate with inferior extension of the dura.
Fig. 1.21a, b Dandy-Walker malformation. Axial CT image (a) and sagittal T1-weighted MRI (b) show absence of the vermis and hypoplasia of the cerebellar hemispheres.
Fig. 1.22a, b Lhermitte-Duclos disease. Axial T1-weighted MRI (a) and axial postcontrast CT image (b) show a nonenhancing lesion in the left cerebellar hemisphere (arrow).




























































































































































































Table 1.2 Supratentorial intra-axial mass lesions

Lesions


CT Findings


Comments


Congenital


Gray matter heterotopia


Laminar heterotopia appears as a band or bands of gray matter attenuation within the cerebral white matter (see Fig. 1.7 , p. 8).


Nodular heterotopia appears as one or more nodules of gray matter attenuation along the ventricles (see Fig. 1.8 , p. 8 ) or within the cerebral white matter (see Fig. 1.9 , p. 9 ).


Focal subcortical heterotopia can be seen as irregular nodular or multinodular masslike zones with gray matter attenuation in subcortical regions (see Fig. 1.9 , p. 9 ).


Disorder of neuronal migration (weeks 7–22 of gestation) in which a collection or layer of neurons is located between the ventricles and cerebral cortex. Can have a bandlike (laminar) or nodular appearance isodense to gray matter; may be unilateral or bilateral. Associated with seizures and schizencephaly.


Unilateral hemimegalencephaly


Fig. 1.11 , p. 9


Nodular or multinodular region of gray matter heterotopia involving all or part of a cerebral hemisphere with associated enlargement of the ipsilateral lateral ventricle and hemisphere.


Neuronal migration disorder associated with hamartomatous overgrowth of a portion of or the whole hemisphere.


Neoplastic astrocytoma


Low-grade astrocytoma: Focal or diffuse mass lesion usually located in white matter with low to intermediate attenuation, with or without mild contrast enhancement. Minimal associated mass effect.


Fig. 1.23


Juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma subtype: Solid/cystic focal lesion with low to intermediate attenuation, usually with prominent contrast enhancement. Lesions located in the cerebellum, hypothalamus, adjacent to third or fourth ventricles, and brainstem.


Fig. 1.24


Gliomatosis cerebri: Infiltrative lesion with poorly defined margins with mass effect located in the white matter, with low to intermediate attenuation. Usually no contrast enhancement until late in disease. Anaplastic astrocytoma: Often irregularly marginated lesion located in white matter with low to intermediate attenuation, with or without contrast enhancement.


Fig. 1.25a, b


Low-grade astrocytoma: Often occurs in children and adults (20–40 y). Tumors comprised of well-differentiated astrocytes. Association with neurofibromatosis type 1, 10-y survival; may become malignant. Juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma subtype: Common in children; usually favorable prognosis if totally resected.


 


Gliomatosis cerebri: Diffusely infiltrating astrocytoma with relative preservation of underlying brain architecture. Imaging appearance may be more prognostic than histologic grade; ~2-y survival.


Anaplastic astrocytoma: Intermediate between low-grade astrocytoma and glioblastoma multiforme; ~2-y survival.


Glioblastoma multiforme


Fig. 1.26


Irregularly marginated mass lesion with necrosis or cyst, mixed low and intermediate attenuation, with or without hemorrhage, prominent heterogeneous contrast enhancement, peripheral edema; can cross the corpus callosum.


Most common primary central nervous system (CNS) tumor in adults, highly malignant neoplasms with necrosis and vascular proliferation, usually in patients older than 50 y; extent of lesion underestimated by CT; survival < 1 y.


Giant cell astrocytoma/tuberous sclerosis


Fig. 1.27


Circumscribed lesion located near the foramen of Monro with mixed low to intermediate attenuation, with or without cysts and/or calcifications, and heterogeneous contrast enhancement.


Subependymal hamartoma near the foramen of Monro; occurs in 15% of patients younger than 20 y with tuberous sclerosis. Slow-growing lesions can progressively cause obstruction of CSF flow through the foramen of Monro; long-term survival usual if resected.


Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma


Circumscribed supratentorial lesion involving the cerebral cortex and white matter, low to intermediate attenuation, with or without cyst (s), heterogeneous contrast enhancement, with or without enhancing mural nodule associated with cyst.


Rare type of astrocytoma occurring in young adults and children; associated with seizure history.


Oligodendroglioma


Fig. 1.28a, b


Circumscribed lesion with mixed low to intermediate attenuation, sites of clumplike calcification, and heterogeneous contrast enhancement; involves white matter and cerebral cortex; can cause chronic erosion of the inner table of the calvarium.


Uncommon slow-growing gliomas with usually mixed histologic patterns (astrocytoma, etc.). Usually in adults older than 35 y; 85% supratentorial. If low grade, 75% 5-y survival; higher grade lesions have a worse prognosis.


Central neurocytoma


Circumscribed lesion located at the margin of the lateral ventricle or septum pellucidum with intraventricular protrusion, heterogeneous low and intermediate attenuation, with or without calcifications and/or small cysts, heterogeneous contrast enhancement.


Rare tumors that have neuronal differentiation; imaging appearance similar to intraventricular oligodendrogliomas. Occur in young adults. Benign slow-growing lesions.


Ganglioglioma, ganglioneuroma, gangliocytoma


Circumscribed tumor, usually supratentorial, often temporal or frontal lobes, low to intermediate attenuation, with or without cysts, with or without contrast enhancement.


Ganglioglioma (contains glial and neuronal elements), ganglioneuroma (contains only ganglion cells). Uncommon tumors; seen in young adults younger than 30 y. Seizure presentation, slow-growing neoplasms. Gangliocytoma (contains only neuronal elements and dysplastic brain tissue). Favorable prognosis if completely resected.


Ependymoma


Fig. 1.29


Circumscribed lobulated supratentorial lesion, often extraventricular, with or without cysts and/or calcifications, low to intermediate attenuation, variable contrast enhancement.


Occurs more commonly in children than adults, one third supratentorial, two-thirds infratentorial; 45% 5-y survival.


Pineal gland tumors


Fig. 1.30a, b


Tumors often have intermediate attenuation to intermediate to slightly high attenuation, with contrast enhancement, with or without central and/or peripheral calcifications. Malignant tumors are often larger than benign pineal lesions (pineocytoma), as well as heterogeneous attenuation and contrast enhancement pattern, with or without leptomeningeal tumor.


Pineal gland tumors account for 8% of intracranial tumors in children and 1% of tumors in adults; 40% of tumors are germinomas, followed by pineoblastomas and pineocytomas, teratomas, choriocarcinomas, endodermal sinus tumors, astrocytomas, and metastatic tumors.


Hamartoma/tuberous sclerosis


Fig. 1.31


Cortical-subcortical lesion with variable attenuation, calcifications in 50% of older children; contrast enhancement uncommon.


Subependymal hamartomas: Small nodules located along and projecting into the lateral ventricles; calcification and contrast enhancement common.


Cortical and subependymal hamartomas are nonmalignant lesions associated with tuberous sclerosis. Tuberous sclerosis is an autosomal dominant disorder associated with hamartomas in multiple organs.


Hypothalamic hamartoma


Fig. 1.32a–c


Sessile or pedunculated lesions at the tuber cinereum of the hypothalamus; often intermediate attenuation similar to gray matter; typically no contrast enhancement; rarely contain cystic and/or fatty portions.


Usually occur in children with isosexual precocious puberty (0–8 y) or seizures (gelastic or partial complex) in second decade; congenital/developmental heterotopia/hamartoma (nonneoplastic lesions).


Lipoma


Fig. 1.33


CT: Lipomas have low attenuation equal to fat elsewhere in the field of view.


MRI: Lipomas have signal isointense to subcutaneous fat on T1-weighted images (high signal) and on T2-weighted signals; signal suppression occurs with frequency-selective fat saturation techniques or with a short time to inversion recovery (STIR) method; typically no gadolinium contrast enhancement or peripheral edema. Lipomas can be nodular or curvilinear. Lipomas can occur in many locations, commonly the corpus callosum, cerebellopontine angle cistern, and tectal plate.


Benign fatty lesions resulting from congenital malformation often located in or near the midline; may contain calcifications and/or traversing blood vessels.


Primitive neuroectodermal tumor


Fig. 1.34a, b


Circumscribed or invasive lesions, low to intermediate attenuation; variable contrast enhancement, frequent dissemination into the leptomeninges.


Highly malignant tumors located in the cerebrum, pineal gland, and cerebellum that frequently disseminate along CSF pathways.


Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor


Fig. 1.35a, b


Circumscribed lesions involving the cerebral cortex and subcortical white matter, low to intermediate attenuation, with or without small cysts; usually no contrast enhancement.


Benign superficial lesions commonly located in the temporal or frontal lobes.


Lymphoma


Fig. 1.36


Primary CNS lymphoma: Focal or infiltrating lesion located in the basal ganglia, periventricular regions, or posterior fossa/brainstem; low to intermediate attenuation; with or without hemorrhage/necrosis in immuno-compromised patients; usually show contrast enhancement. Diffuse leptomeningeal contrast enhancement is another pattern of intracranial lymphoma.


Primary CNS lymphoma more common than secondary, usually in adults older than 40 y. B-cell lymphoma is more common than T-cell lymphoma. Increasing incidence related to the number of immunocompromised patients in the population. CT imaging features of primary and secondary lymphoma of brain overlap. Intracranial lymphoma can involve the leptomeninges in secondary lymphoma > primary lymphoma.


Hemangioblastoma


Circumscribed tumors usually located in the cerebellum and/or brainstem; small contrast-enhancing nodule with or without cyst or larger lesion with prominent heterogeneous enhancement with or without contrast-enhancing vessels within the lesion or at the periphery, Occasionally lesions have evidence of recent or remote hemorrhage.


Rarely occurs in cerebral hemispheres; occurs in adolescents and young and middle-aged adults. Lesions are typically multiple in patients with von HippelLindau disease.


Metastases


Fig. 1.37a, b


Circumscribed spheroid lesions in the brain; can have various intra-axial locations, often at gray-white matter junctions; usually low to intermediate attenuation; with or without hemorrhage, calcifications, or cysts; variable contrast enhancement. Often associated with adjacent low attenuation from axonal edema.


Represent ~33% of intracranial tumors, usually from extracranial primary neoplasm in adults older than 40 y. Primary tumor source: lung > breast > gastrointestinal (GI) > genitourinary (GU) > melanoma.


Neurocutaneous melanosis


Extra- or intra-axial lesions usually < 3 cm in diameter with irregular margins in the leptomeninges or brain parenchyma/brainstem (anterior temporal lobes, cerebellum, thalami, and inferior frontal lobes).


CT: May show subtle hyperdensity secondary to increased melanin, with or without vermian hypoplasia, with or without arachnoid cysts, with or without Dandy-Walker malformation.


MRI: Zones with intermediate to slightly high signal on T1-weighted images secondary to increased melanin, with gadolinium contrast enhancement; with or without vermian hypoplasia, with or without arachnoid cysts, with or without Dandy-Walker malformation.


Neuroectodermal dysplasia with proliferation of melanocytes in leptomeninges associated with large and/or numerous cutaneous nevi. May change into CNS melanoma.


Inflammatory


Cerebritis


Fig. 1.38a–c


Poorly defined zone or focal area of decreased attenuation, minimal or no contrast enhancement; involves cerebral cortex and white matter for bacterial and fungal infections.


Focal infection/inflammation of brain tissue from bacteria or fungi, secondary to sinusitis, meningitis, surgery, hematogenous source (cardiac and other vascular shunts), and/or immunocompromised status. Can progress to abscess formation.


Pyogenic brain abscess


Fig. 1.39a, b


Circumscribed lesion with a central zone of low attenuation (with or without air-fluid level) surrounded by a thin rim of intermediate attenuation; peripheral poorly defined zone of decreased attenuation representing edema; ringlike contrast enhancement that is sometimes thicker laterally than medially.


Formation of brain abscess occurs 2 weeks after cerebritis with liquefaction and necrosis centrally surrounded by a capsule and peripheral edema. Can be multiple. Complication from meningitis and/or sinusitis, septicemia, trauma, surgery, or cardiac shunt.


Fungal brain abscess


Fig. 1.40


Findings can vary depending on organism; lesions occur in meninges and brain parenchyma; solid or cystic-appearing lesions with decreased attenuation, nodular or ring pattern of contrast enhancement, peripheral zone with decreased attenuation in brain lesions (edema).


Occur in immunocompromised or diabetic patients with resultant granulomas in meninges and brain parenchyma. Cryptococcus involves the basal meninges and extends along perivascular spaces into the basal ganglia; Aspergillus and Mucor spread via direct extension through the paranasal sinuses or hematogenously and invade blood vessels, resulting in hemorrhagic lesions and/or cerebral infarcts. Coccidioidomycosis usually involves the basal meninges.


Encephalitis


Fig. 1.41


Poorly defined zone or zones of decreased attenuation, minimal or no contrast enhancement; involves the cerebral cortex and/or white matter; minimal localized mass effect. Herpes simplex typically involves the temporal lobes/limbic system with or without hemorrhage; cytomegalovirus (CMV) usually in periventricular/subependymal locations.


HIV often involves periatrial white matter.


Infection/inflammation of brain tissue from viruses, often seen in immunocompromised patients (e.g., herpes simplex, CMV, HIV, and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy) or immunocompetent patients (e.g., St. Louis encephalitis, eastern or western equine encephalitis, and Epstein-Barr virus).


Tuberculoma


Fig. 1.42


Intra-axial lesions in cerebral hemispheres, basal ganglia, and brainstem (adults) and cerebellum (children). Lesions can have decreased attenuation, central zone of low attenuation with a thin peripheral rim of intermediate attenuation; with solid or rim pattern of contrast enhancement; with or without calcification. Meningeal lesions: Nodular or cystic zones of basilar meningeal enhancement.


Occurs in immunocompromised patients and inhabitants of developing countries. Caseating intracranial granulomas via hematogenous dissemination; meninges > brain lesions.


Parasitic brain lesions


Toxoplasmosis


Fig. 1.43


Single or multiple solid and/or cystic-appearing lesions located in basal ganglia and/or corticomedullary junctions in cerebral hemispheres, low to intermediate attenuation; nodular or rim pattern of contrast enhancement; with or without mild peripheral low attenuation (edema). Chronic phase: calcified granulomas.


Most common opportunistic CNS infection in patients with AIDS; caused by ingestion of food contaminated with parasites (Toxoplasma gondii). Can be seen as a congenital or neonatal infection (TORCH syndrome: toxoplasmosis, other agents, rubella, cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex).


Cysticercosis


Fig. 1.44a, b


Single or multiple cystic-appearing lesions in brain or meninges; acute/subacute phase: Low to intermediate attenuation, rim with or without nodular pattern of contrast enhancement, with or without peripheral low attenuation (edema). Chronic phase: calcified granulomas.


Caused by ingestion of ova (Taenia solium) in contaminated food (undercooked pork); involves meninges > brain parenchyma > ventricles.


Hydatid cyst


Echinococcus granulosus: Single or rarely multiple cystic-appearing lesions with low attenuation surrounded by a thin wall; typically no contrast enhancement or peripheral edema unless superinfected; often located in vascular territory of the middle cerebral artery. Echinococcus multilocularis: Cystic (with or without multilocular) and/or solid lesions, central zone of intermediate attenuation surrounded by a slightly thickened rim, with contrast enhancement; peripheral zone of decreased attenuation (edema) and calcifications are common.


Caused by parasites E. granulosus (South America, Middle East, Australia, and New Zealand) and E. multilocularis (North America, Europe, Turkey, and China). CNS involvement in 2% of cases of hydatid infestation.


Inflammatory disorders


Radiation necrosis


Focal lesion with or without mass effect or poorly defined zone of low to intermediate attenuation, with or without contrast enhancement involving tissue (gray matter and/or white matter) in field of treatment.


Usually occurs from 4 to 6 months to 10 y after radiation treatment; may be difficult to distinguish from neoplasm. Positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy might be helpful for evaluation.


Demyelinating disease: multiple sclerosis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM)


Fig. 1.45a–c


Lesions located in cerebral or cerebellar white matter, brainstem, or basal ganglia; lesions usually have low to intermediate attenuation on CT. Zones of active demyelination may show contrast enhancement and mild localized swelling.


MRI: Zones of low to intermediate signal on T1-weighted images and high signal on fluid attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) and T2-weighted images; with or without gadolinium contrast enhancement. Contrast enhancement can be ringlike or nodular, usually in acute/early subacute phase of demyelination. Lesions rarely can have associated mass effect simulating neoplasms.


Multiple sclerosis is the most common acquired demyelinating disease usually affecting women (peak age 20–40 y). Other demyelinating diseases include acute disseminated encephalomyelitis/immune mediated demyelination after viral infection; toxins (exogenous from environmental exposure or ingestion of alcohol, solvents, etc., or endogenous from metabolic disorders, e.g., leukodystrophies and mitochondrial encephalopathies), radiation injury, trauma, and vascular disease.


Sarcoidosis


Poorly marginated intra-axial zone with low to intermediate attenuation; usually shows contrast enhancement with localized mass effect and peripheral edema. Often associated with contrast enhancement in the leptomeninges.


Multisystem noncaseating granulomatous disease of uncertain cause that can involve the CNS in 5% to 15% of cases. Associated with severe neurologic deficits if untreated.


Hemorrhage


Intracerebral hemorrhage/hematoma


Attenuation of the hematoma depends on its age, size, location, hematocrit, hemoglobin oxidation state, clot retraction, and extent of edema.


Hyperacute phase (4–6 h): Hemoglobin primarily as diamagnetic oxyhemoglobin (iron Fe2+ state). CT: High attenuation on CT.


MRI: Intermediate signal on T1-weighted images and slightly high signal on T2-weighted images.


Acute phase (12–48 h): Hemoglobin primarily as para-magnetic deoxyhemoglobin (iron, Fe2+ state). CT: High attenuation in acute clot directly related to hematocrit, hemoglobin concentration, and high protein concentration. Hematocrit in acute clot approaches 90%.


Fig. 1.46


Fig. 1.47


Fig. 1.48


Fig. 1.49 , p. 27


MRI: Intermediate signal on T1-weighted images, low signal on T2-weighted images, surrounded by a peripheral zone of high T2 signal (edema).


Early subacute phase (> 2 d): Hemoglobin becomes oxidized to the iron Fe3+ state, methemoglobin, which is strongly paramagnetic. CT: High attenuation.


MRI: When methemoglobin is initially intracellular, the hematoma has high signal on T1-weighted images progressing from peripheral to central and low signal on T2-weighted images, surrounded by a zone of high T2 signal (edema). When methemoglobin eventually becomes primarily extra-cellular, the hematoma has high signal on T1-weighted images and high signal on T2-weighted images.


Late subacute phase (> 7 d to 6 wk): Intracerebral hematomas decrease 1.5 HU per day. Hematomas become isodense to hypodense; peripheral contrast enhancement from blood–brain barrier breakdown and vascularized capsule.


Chronic phase: Hemoglobin as extracellular methemoglobin is progressively degraded to hemosiderin.


CT: Chronic hematomas have low attenuation with localized encephalomalacia. Zones with high attenuation represent new sites of rebleeding.


MRI: Hematoma progresses from a lesion with high signal on T1- and T2-weighted images, with a peripheral rim of low signal on T2-weighted images (hemosiderin), to predominant hemosiderin composition and low signal on T2-weighted images.


Can result from trauma, ruptured aneurysms or vascular malformations, coagulopathy, hypertension, adverse drug reaction, amyloid angiopathy, hemorrhagic transformation of cerebral infarction, metastases, abscesses, and viral infections (herpes simplex, CMV).


Cerebral contusions


Fig. 1.47


CT: Appearance of contusions is initially one of focal hemorrhage involving the cerebral cortex and subcortical white matter. Contusions eventually appear as focal superficial encephalomalacia zones.


Contusions are superficial brain injuries involving the cerebral cortex and subcortical white matter that result from skull fracture and/or acceleration/deceleration trauma to the inner table of the skull. Often involve the anterior portions of the temporal and frontal lobes and inferior portions of the frontal lobes.


Metastases


Fig. 1.48a, b


The CT appearance of a hemorrhagic metastatic lesion is one of an intracerebral hematoma involving a portion or all of the neoplasm, usually associated with peripheral edema (decreased attenuation), often multiple; with contrast enhancement in nonhemorrhagic portions of lesions.


Metastatic intra-axial tumors associated with hemorrhage include bronchogenic carcinoma, renal cell carcinoma, melanoma, choriocarcinoma, and thyroid carcinoma. May be difficult to distinguish from hemorrhage related to other etiologies, such as vascular malformations and amyloid angiopathy.


Vascular


Arteriovenous malformation (AVM)


Lesions with irregular margins that can be located in the brain parenchyma (pia, dura, or both locations).


CT: AVMs contain multiple tortuous tubular vessels that have intermediate or slightly increased attenuation that shows contrast enhancement. Calcifications occur in 30% of cases. Computed tomography angiography (CTA) shows arteries, veins, and nidus of AVM even when there is an intra-axial hemorrhage.


Fig. 1.49a, b


MRI: Serpiginous flow voids on T1- and T2-weighted images secondary to patent arteries with high blood flow, as well as thrombosed vessels with variable signal, areas of hemorrhage in various phases, calcifications, and gliosis. The venous portions often show gadolinium enhancement. Gradient echo MRI shows flow-related enhancement (high signal) in patent arteries and veins of the AVM. MRA using time of flight (TOF) or phase contrast techniques can provide additional detailed information about the nidus, feeding arteries and draining veins, and presence of associated aneurysms. Usually not associated with mass effect unless there is recent hemorrhage or venous occlusion.


Supratentorial AVMs occur more frequently (80%–90%) than infratentorial AVMs (10%–20%). Annual risk of hemorrhage. AVMs can be sporadic, congenital, or associated with a history of trauma. Multiple AVMs can be seen in syndromes: Rendu-Osler-Weber (AVMs in brain and lungs, and mucosal, capillary telangiectasias); Wyburn-Mason (AVMs in brain and retina, with cutaneous nevi).


Cavernous hemangioma


Single or multiple multilobulated intra-axial lesions.


CT: Lesions have intermediate to slightly increased attenuation, with or without calcifications.


Supratentorial cavernous angiomas occur more frequently than infratentorial lesions. Can be located in many different locations, multiple lesions > 50%.


Venous angioma


CT: No abnormality or small, slightly hyperdense zone prior to contrast administration. Contrast enhancement seen in a slightly prominent vein draining a collection of small veins.


MRI: On postcontrast T1-weighted images, venous angiomas are seen as a gadolinium contrast-enhancing transcortical vein draining a collection of small medullary veins (caput medusae). The draining vein can be seen as a signal void on T2-weighted images.


Considered an anomalous venous formation typically not associated with hemorrhage; usually an incidental finding except when associated with cavernous hemangioma.


Neuroepithelial cyst


CT: Well-circumscribed cysts with low attenuation, no contrast enhancement.


MRI: Cysts have low signal on T1-weighted images and high signal on T2-weighted images, thin walls, no gadolinium contrast enhancement or peripheral edema.


Cyst walls have histopathologic features similar to epithelium, neuroepithelial cysts; located in choroid plexus > choroidal fissure > ventricles > brain parenchyma.


Porencephalic cyst


Fig. 1.50


CT: Irregular, relatively well-circumscribed zone with low attenuation, no contrast enhancement.


MRI: Zone of low signal on T1-weighted images and high signal on T2-weighted images similar to CSF, surrounded by poorly defined thin zone of high T2 signal in adjacent brain tissue; no gadolinium contrast enhancement or peripheral edema.


Cysts represent remote sites of brain injury (trauma, infarction, infection, or hemorrhage) with evolution into a cystic zone with CSF attenuation and MRI signal characteristics surrounded by gliosis in adjacent brain parenchyma. Gliosis (high T2 signal) allows differentiation from schizencephaly.


Cerebral infarction related to occlusion of large vessels


CT and MRI features of cerebral and cerebellar infarcts depend on the age of the infarct relative to the time of examination.


Hyperacute (< 12 h):


CT: No abnormality (50%); decreased attenuation and blurring of lentiform nuclei; hyperdense artery up to 50%. MRI: Localized edema; usually isointense signal to normal brain on T1- and T2-weighted images. Diffusion-weighted images can show positive findings related to decreased apparent diffusion coefficients secondary to cytotoxic edema, absence of arterial flow void, or arterial enhancement in the vascular distribution of the infarct.


Acute (12–24 h):


CT: Zones with decreased attenuation in basal ganglia, blurring of junction between cerebral cortex and white matter, sulcal effacement.


MRI: Intermediate signal on T1-weighted images, high signal on T2-weighted images, localized edema. Signal abnormalities commonly involve the cerebral cortex and subcortical white matter and/or basal ganglia.


Early subacute (24 h–3 d):


CT: Localized swelling at sites with low attenuation involving gray and white matter (often wedge shaped), with or without hemorrhage MRI: Zones with low to intermediate signal on T1-weighted images, high signal on T2-weighted images, localized edema, with or without hemorrhage, with or without gadolinium contrast enhancement.


Late subacute (4 d–2 wk):


CT: Localized swelling increases and then decreases; low attenuation at lesion can become more prominent; with or without gyral contrast enhancement.


MRI: Low to intermediate signal on T1-weighted images, high signal on T2-weighted images, edema/mass effect diminishing, with or without hemorrhage, with or without contrast enhancement.


2 weeks to 2 months:


CT: with or without Gyral contrast enhancement, localized mass effect resolves.


MRI: Low to intermediate signal on T1-weighted images, high signal on T2-weighted images; edema resolves; with or without hemorrhage, with or without enhancement eventually declines. > 2 months:


CT: Zone of low attenuation associated with encephalomalacia.


MRI: Low signal on T1-weighted images, high signal on T2-weighted images, encephalomalacic changes, with or without calcification, hemosiderin.


Fig. 1.51a–d


Cerebral infarcts usually result from occlusive vascular disease involving large, medium, or small arteries. Vascular occlusion may be secondary to atheromatous arterial disease, cardiogenic emboli, neoplastic encasement, hypercoagulable states, dissection, or congenital anomalies. Cerebral infarcts usually result from arterial occlusion involving specific vascular territories, although they occasionally occur from metabolic disorders (mitochondrial encephalopathies, etc.) or intracranial venous occlusion (thrombophlebitis, hypercoagulable states, dehydration, etc.), which do not correspond to arterial distributions.

Fig. 1.23 Low-grade astrocytoma in a 5-year-old boy. Axial postcontrast image shows a circumscribed low-attenuation lesion with a thin margin of contrast enhancement in the left cerebral hemisphere.
Fig. 1.24 Juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma. Axial postcontrast image shows a cystic lesion with a nodular zone of contrast enhancement in the right cerebellar hemisphere and vermis.
Fig. 1.25a, b Anaplastic astrocytoma in a 61-year-old woman. Sagittal (a) and axial (b) postcontrast images show a lesion in the right frontal lobe that has peripheral contrast enhancement.
Fig. 1.26 Glioblastoma multiforme. Axial postcontrast image shows a contrast enhancing lesion involving both frontal lobes and corpus callosum.
Fig. 1.27 Giant cell astrocytoma. Axial image in a patient with tuberous sclerosis shows a giant cell astrocytoma at the right foramen magnum, as well as multiple calcified ependymal hamartomas.
Fig. 1.28a, b Oligodendroglioma. Axial CT image (a) and axial T2-weighted MRI (b) show a lesion in the right frontal lobe containing calcifications.
Fig. 1.29 Ependymoma. Axial image shows a lesion in the right frontal lobe that contains calcifications and is associated with adjacent axonal edema.
Fig. 1.30a, b Pineoblastoma. Sagittal (a) and axial (b) images show a pineal tumor containing calcifications.
Fig. 1.31 Hamartoma. Axial image in a child with tuberous sclerosis shows multiple calcified and noncalcified ependymal hamartomas, as well as cortical tubers and zones of low attenuation in the white matter.
Fig. 1.32a–c Hypothalamic hamartoma. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI (a), axial FLAIR MRI (b), and axial CT image (c) show a lesion involving the hypothalamus that extends inferiorly (arrow).
Fig. 1.33 Lipoma. Axial image shows a lipoma involving the anterior portion of the corpus callosum (arrow).
Fig. 1.34a, b Primitive neuroectodermal tumor. Pre- (a) and postcontrast (b) images show a large tumor involving the anterior right frontal lobe containing calcifications that has associated mass effect and subfalcine herniation leftward. The lesion shows heterogeneous contrast enhancement.
Fig. 1.35a, b Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor. Axial CT image (a) and axial T2-weighted MRI (b) show a low-attenuation lesion with high T2 signal in the anteromedial left temporal lobe (arrows).
Fig. 1.36 Lymphoma. Axial postcontrast image shows a heterogeneous enhancing lesion in the right basal ganglia with associated mass effect.
Fig. 1.37a, b Metastases. Axial postcontrast images show ring and nodular enhancing metastatic lesions.
Fig. 1.38a–c Cerebritis. Postcontrast axial images (a,b) in a neonate show poorly defined zones of contrast enhancement involving the superficial portions of the brain with localized destruction and calcification. Axial postcontrast image (c) in a 35-year-old man shows cerebritis with low attenuation involving the right frontal lobe, as well as a left subdural empyema and right frontal sinusitis.
Fig. 1.39a, b Brain abscess, pyogenic. Axial postcontrast image (a) shows a ring-enhancing lesion in the right temporal lobe. Axial image (b) shows a ring-shaped lesion with low attenuation centrally and axonal edema peripheral to the abscess rim.
Fig. 1.40 Fungal brain abscess,Aspergillus. Axial image shows a poorly defined zone of decreased attenuation involving the left cerebral hemisphere.
Fig. 1.41 Encephalitis, herpes type 1. Axial image shows poorly defined zones of decreased attenuation in the frontal and temporal lobes.
Fig. 1.42 Tuberculoma. Axial post-contrast image shows diffuse contrast enhancement in the basal meninges (basal meningitis), as well as a ring-enhancing lesion (tuberculoma) in the anterior left temporal lobe.
Fig. 1.43 Toxoplasmosis. Axial image shows multiple calcified (healed) granulomas.
Fig. 1.44a, b Cysticercosis. Axial images show multiple calcified (healed) granulomas.
Fig. 1.45a–c Multiple sclerosis. Axial CT images (a,b) and axial fluid attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI (c) show multiple zones of decreased CT attenuation and increased T2 signal in the cerebral white matter.
Fig. 1.46 Intracerebral hematoma. Axial image shows an acute hypertensive-related hemorrhage with high attenuation in the right basal ganglia.
Fig. 1.47 Cerebral contusion. Axial image shows a contusion with high-attenuation hemorrhage involving the anterior portion of the right frontal lobe.
Fig. 1.48a, b Hemorrhagic metastases from melanoma. Axial images show multiple hemorrhagic metastases.
Fig. 1.49a, b Hemorrhage from an arteriovenous malformation (AVM). Axial CT image (a) shows an intra-axial hemorrhage in the right cerebral hemisphere. CTA image (b) shows an AVM as the cause of the hemorrhage (arrow).
Fig. 1.50 Porencephalic cyst. Axial CT image in a neonate shows a porencephalic cyst in the anterior left frontal lobe that developed from a hemorrhage in this region.
Fig. 1.51a–d Cerebral infarct. Axial CT image (a) shows a zone of decreased attenuation in the vascular distribution of the right middle cerebral artery. Axial FLAIR MRI (b), axial diffusion-weighted MRI (c), and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map (d) show high T2 signal and restricted diffusion at the site of a recent cerebral infarct.

Only gold members can continue reading. Log In or Register to continue

Stay updated, free articles. Join our Telegram channel

Jul 5, 2020 | Posted by in GENERAL RADIOLOGY | Comments Off on 1 Brain and Extra-axial Lesions(Table 1.1 – Table 1.2)

Full access? Get Clinical Tree

Get Clinical Tree app for offline access