Radiology Case Reports (Dec 2018)

Atypical chronological changes on neuroimaging in the epidermoid in the frontal lobe with intracystic hemorrhage and tumor growth: Case report

  • Minami Akahoshi, MD,
  • Kiyoyuki Yanaka, MD, PhD,
  • Daisuke Watanabe, MD,
  • Kazuhiro Nakamura, MD, PhD,
  • Alexander Zaboronok, MD, PhD,
  • Eiichi Ishikawa, MD, PhD,
  • Akira Matsumura, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
pp. 1133 – 1136

Abstract

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Intracranial epidermoids are rare lesions accounting for 0.2%-1.8% of all intracranial tumors. They commonly develop in the cerebellopontine angle and the parasellar region and can appear with atypical neuroimaging features due to intracystic hemorrhages which complicate diagnosis. The authors present a case of a 62-year-old woman with a frontal epidermoid cyst with a hemorrhage and tumor growth. A series of atypical radiological findings showed gradual changes in the lesion appearance that were confirmed with surgery and histopathology. To avoid surgical complications such as chemical meningitis, it is important to remember that epidermoid cysts occasionally bleed, leading to atypical MRI and/or CT findings and diagnostic difficulties. Development of epidermoid cysts in atypical locations in the brain may result in challenges to accurate diagnosis. Keywords: Epidermoid cyst, Intracystic hemorrhage, Atypical radiological findings