Intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysis

Intraosseous cavernous angiomas (CAs) of the skull are rare, and those cases that appear are commonly localized in the frontal bone. Computed tomography (CT) and Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) typically show a well-defined intradiploic lytic mass with homogeneous enhancement. We describe an intrao...

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Main Authors: Sakyo Hirai, MD, Kuniyasu Saigusa, MD, PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-09-01
Series:Interdisciplinary Neurosurgery
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214751914000231
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spelling doaj-80541b91c3c947d8bed68da9428b2f3f2020-11-24T22:58:21ZengElsevierInterdisciplinary Neurosurgery2214-75192014-09-0113535510.1016/j.inat.2014.05.003Intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysisSakyo Hirai, MDKuniyasu Saigusa, MD, PhDIntraosseous cavernous angiomas (CAs) of the skull are rare, and those cases that appear are commonly localized in the frontal bone. Computed tomography (CT) and Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) typically show a well-defined intradiploic lytic mass with homogeneous enhancement. We describe an intraosseous cystic CA of the occipital skull in a 46-year-old man who presented with transient right-sided deafness and posterior cervical pain. MRI revealed a large (3.7 cm × 3.2 cm × 4.1 cm) extra-axial tumor, compressing the right cerebellar hemisphere, with heterogeneous peripheral enhancement. A CT scan showed osteolytic change of the occipital skull. The tumor was totally resected via a suboccipital approach. Intraoperatively, we found a mainly cystic tumor containing xanthochromic fluid. Histologically, the tumor was diagnosed as a cavernous angioma. This is the first reported case of an intraosseous CA of the skull with cyst formation. The characteristic radiological imaging of the presented case mimicked a malignant tumor with peripheral enhancement and prominent osteolytic change.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214751914000231
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sakyo Hirai, MD
Kuniyasu Saigusa, MD, PhD
spellingShingle Sakyo Hirai, MD
Kuniyasu Saigusa, MD, PhD
Intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysis
Interdisciplinary Neurosurgery
author_facet Sakyo Hirai, MD
Kuniyasu Saigusa, MD, PhD
author_sort Sakyo Hirai, MD
title Intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysis
title_short Intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysis
title_full Intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysis
title_fullStr Intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysis
title_full_unstemmed Intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysis
title_sort intraosseous cystic cavernous angioma with occipital skull osteolysis
publisher Elsevier
series Interdisciplinary Neurosurgery
issn 2214-7519
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Intraosseous cavernous angiomas (CAs) of the skull are rare, and those cases that appear are commonly localized in the frontal bone. Computed tomography (CT) and Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) typically show a well-defined intradiploic lytic mass with homogeneous enhancement. We describe an intraosseous cystic CA of the occipital skull in a 46-year-old man who presented with transient right-sided deafness and posterior cervical pain. MRI revealed a large (3.7 cm × 3.2 cm × 4.1 cm) extra-axial tumor, compressing the right cerebellar hemisphere, with heterogeneous peripheral enhancement. A CT scan showed osteolytic change of the occipital skull. The tumor was totally resected via a suboccipital approach. Intraoperatively, we found a mainly cystic tumor containing xanthochromic fluid. Histologically, the tumor was diagnosed as a cavernous angioma. This is the first reported case of an intraosseous CA of the skull with cyst formation. The characteristic radiological imaging of the presented case mimicked a malignant tumor with peripheral enhancement and prominent osteolytic change.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214751914000231
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