·        Four predominant imaging patterns of pilocytic astrocytoma have been described: 
1.     Mass with a nonenhancing cyst and an intensely enhancing mural nodule
2.     Mass with an enhancing cyst wall and an intensely enhancing mural nodule
3.     Necrotic mass with a central nonenhancing zone
4.     Predominantly solid mass with minimal to no cystlike component
·        Hence, two-thirds of all cases demonstrate the classic imaging manifestation of a cystlike mass with an enhancing mural nodule. 
·        Although most cyst walls do not enhance, some may enhance intensely, even as much as the mural nodule.
·        Differential diagnosis : hemangioblastoma
| 
JUVENILE PILOCYTIC ASTROCYTOMA | 
HEMANGIOBLASTOMA | 
| 
Hypoattenuating cystic componenet with hypo to isoattenuating mural nodule with avid contrast enhancement | 
Hypoattenuating cyst and isodense nodule with avid contrast enhancement | 
| 
Well demarcated lesion | 
Well demarcated lesion | 
| 
Solid component: iso to hypointense relative to normal brain | 
Nodule peripherally located near pial surface and isointense to gray matter on T1 | 
| 
Cystic component follows fluid signal intensity | 
Iso or slightly hyperintense on T1 compared with CSF | 
| 
Nodule: hyperintense with minimal surrounding T2WI signal | 
Nodule : hyperintense | 
| 
Cyst follows fluid signal | 
High signal intensity | 
| 
Avid enhancement of mural nodule | 
Avid enhancement of solid component | 
| 
No reported abnormal flow voids | 
Peripheral in location due to vascular supply from pia mater with nodule located near pial surface. May see abnormal vessels/ flow voids | 
| 
Low signal on DWI and high on ADC | 
Low signal on DWI and high on ADC | 
| 
Rarely calcifies | 
May bleed into cyst leading to fluid levels | 
| 
Rarely hemorrhage into the nodule or into subarachnoid space | 
If hemorrhage into nodule, appearance depends on age of hemorrhage | 
References :
1.     Pilocytic Astrocytoma: Radiologic-Pathologic Correlation, November 2004 RadioGraphics, 24
2.     Practical differential diagnosis for CT and MRI.

 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave your comments