Occipital Falcine Anaplastic Hemangiopericytoma Mimicking Meningioma

The rarity of hemangiopericytoma (HPC) and its controversial histological classification result in its frequent misdiagnosis and thus make the treatment quite challenging. It is often difficult to distinguish these tumors from meningiomas based on clinical features and radiological findings. This is...

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Main Authors: Davendran Kanesen, Regunath Kandasamy, Zamzuri Idris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd. 2016-12-01
Series:Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/0976-3147.196463
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spelling doaj-8cb7fbee1c7a48db8f18ad2f29e46d992021-04-02T12:13:53ZengThieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice0976-31470976-31552016-12-0107S095S09810.4103/0976-3147.196463Occipital Falcine Anaplastic Hemangiopericytoma Mimicking MeningiomaDavendran Kanesen0Regunath Kandasamy1Zamzuri Idris2Department of Neuroscience, School of Medical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Kubang Kerian, Kelantan, MalaysiaDepartment of Neuroscience, School of Medical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Kubang Kerian, Kelantan, MalaysiaDepartment of Neuroscience, School of Medical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Kubang Kerian, Kelantan, MalaysiaThe rarity of hemangiopericytoma (HPC) and its controversial histological classification result in its frequent misdiagnosis and thus make the treatment quite challenging. It is often difficult to distinguish these tumors from meningiomas based on clinical features and radiological findings. This is a case report of a man, diagnosed clinically and radiologically as meningioma, which turned out to be anaplastic HPC on histological examination. A 30-year-old man presented with 3 months of progressively worsening of headache and blurring of vision. Clinical examination revealed the right homonymous hemianopia with reduced visual acuity and papilledema bilaterally. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a multilobulated and heterogenous extraaxial lesion attached to the occipital falx. It measured 9.0 cm (AP) × 5.5 cm (W) × 5.8 cm (CC) and expands bilaterally with major bulk on the left. An occipital craniotomy followed by a subtotal tumor excision was only achieved due to profuse bleeding intraoperatively. Histopathology confirmed an anaplastic HPC (WHO Grade 3). The importance of differentiation between HPCs and meningiomas cannot be overemphasized. A preoperative correct diagnosis is difficult, but it is important that it should be made. Multilobulated (mushroom appearance), prominent internal signal voids, relatively narrow dural attachment, and lytic destruction without calcifications are useful findings to distinguish HPCs from meningiomas.http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/0976-3147.196463 anaplastic hemangiopericytoma dural tail meningioma occipital falcine staghorn
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Davendran Kanesen
Regunath Kandasamy
Zamzuri Idris
spellingShingle Davendran Kanesen
Regunath Kandasamy
Zamzuri Idris
Occipital Falcine Anaplastic Hemangiopericytoma Mimicking Meningioma
Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice
anaplastic hemangiopericytoma
dural tail
meningioma
occipital falcine
staghorn
author_facet Davendran Kanesen
Regunath Kandasamy
Zamzuri Idris
author_sort Davendran Kanesen
title Occipital Falcine Anaplastic Hemangiopericytoma Mimicking Meningioma
title_short Occipital Falcine Anaplastic Hemangiopericytoma Mimicking Meningioma
title_full Occipital Falcine Anaplastic Hemangiopericytoma Mimicking Meningioma
title_fullStr Occipital Falcine Anaplastic Hemangiopericytoma Mimicking Meningioma
title_full_unstemmed Occipital Falcine Anaplastic Hemangiopericytoma Mimicking Meningioma
title_sort occipital falcine anaplastic hemangiopericytoma mimicking meningioma
publisher Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
series Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice
issn 0976-3147
0976-3155
publishDate 2016-12-01
description The rarity of hemangiopericytoma (HPC) and its controversial histological classification result in its frequent misdiagnosis and thus make the treatment quite challenging. It is often difficult to distinguish these tumors from meningiomas based on clinical features and radiological findings. This is a case report of a man, diagnosed clinically and radiologically as meningioma, which turned out to be anaplastic HPC on histological examination. A 30-year-old man presented with 3 months of progressively worsening of headache and blurring of vision. Clinical examination revealed the right homonymous hemianopia with reduced visual acuity and papilledema bilaterally. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a multilobulated and heterogenous extraaxial lesion attached to the occipital falx. It measured 9.0 cm (AP) × 5.5 cm (W) × 5.8 cm (CC) and expands bilaterally with major bulk on the left. An occipital craniotomy followed by a subtotal tumor excision was only achieved due to profuse bleeding intraoperatively. Histopathology confirmed an anaplastic HPC (WHO Grade 3). The importance of differentiation between HPCs and meningiomas cannot be overemphasized. A preoperative correct diagnosis is difficult, but it is important that it should be made. Multilobulated (mushroom appearance), prominent internal signal voids, relatively narrow dural attachment, and lytic destruction without calcifications are useful findings to distinguish HPCs from meningiomas.
topic anaplastic hemangiopericytoma
dural tail
meningioma
occipital falcine
staghorn
url http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/0976-3147.196463
work_keys_str_mv AT davendrankanesen occipitalfalcineanaplastichemangiopericytomamimickingmeningioma
AT regunathkandasamy occipitalfalcineanaplastichemangiopericytomamimickingmeningioma
AT zamzuriidris occipitalfalcineanaplastichemangiopericytomamimickingmeningioma
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