Radiology Case Reports (Aug 2024)

Solid brain metastasis mimicking intracerebral hematoma on imaging

  • Satoshi Hori, MD, PhD,
  • Shoichi Nagai, MD, PhD,
  • Yoshinobu Maeda, MD, PhD,
  • Kohtaro Tsumura, MD,
  • Satoshi Kuroda, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 8
pp. 3453 – 3455

Abstract

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A 79-year-old woman with a history of resection of the ascending colon cancer presented with conscious disturbance, dysarthria, nausea, and dizziness. Computed tomography (CT) revealed striking high-density lesions in the left cerebellum and left frontal lobe with slight perifocal edema. These lesions were suspected the coexistence of spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage and frontal lobe metastasis, or multiple brain metastases with massive hematoma. Because of the mass effect of the cerebellar lesion and impaired consciousness, she underwent emergency resection of the cerebellar lesion which was found to be composed of grayish abnormal soft solid tissue and did not include an obvious hematoma mass. The pathological findings were consistent with brain metastasis from colon cancer. This is an impressive rare case of intraoperative solid brain metastasis with a clearly homogenous hyper-dense CT appearance mimicking intracerebral hematoma.

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