fat containing lesions of the brain

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Fat and Cholesterol Containing Intracranial Lesions Pat Farley, MD Neuroradiology Division, UNC

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Page 1: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Fat and Cholesterol Containing Intracranial

Lesions

Pat Farley, MDNeuroradiology Division, UNC

Page 2: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Objectives

• To name fat containing lesions of the brain.

• Give differentiators of these lesions.• Recognize associations and complications

of these lesions.• Recognize that dermoid and epidermoid

do not look alike, just sound alike.

Page 3: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoid Cyst

• Unilocular cyst with thick walls of connective tissue

• Rare– <0.5 % of intracranial tumors

• Clinical Issues– Uncomplicated Dermoids:

• Headache (30%)• Seizure (30%)

Page 4: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoids, Complications• Rupture

– This can cause a chemical meningitis as the fat droplets spread within the subarachnoid space with resultant inflammatory changes.

– Larger lesions are associated with higher risk of rupture.

• Transformation– Rarely can transform in to a malignant squamous cell

cancer.• Dermal sinus

– Can lead to infection.

Page 5: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoids, Imaging Appearance• Well-circumscribed lipid containing masses • Location

– Most often in sellar/parasellar/frontonasal region – Posterior fossa; midline vermis & 4th ventricle – May be intraventricular in lateral, 3rd, or 4th ventricles – May also be located in spine and orbits

• Ruptured Dermoid– Subarachnoid/intraventricular spread of fat contents

• Size– Variable

Page 6: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoids, CT Appearance• Non Contrast CT

– Classic• Round/lobulated, well-delineated, cystic mass • Fat hypodensity • 20% contain capsular calcifications • Rupture, droplets of fat disseminate in cisterns, may cause fat-fluid

level within ventricles – Atypical

• "dense" dermoid: Hyper attenuating on CT

• Skull/scalp dermoid expands diploic space • Frontonasal - Bifid crista galli, large foramen cecum with

possible sinus tract • Post Contrast - No enhancement

Page 7: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoids, MRI

• T1 and T2:– Hyperintense mass on T1WI. Heterogeneous

signal on T2.– Chemical shift artifact in frequency encoding

direction – Ruptured Dermoid

• Droplets very hyperintense on T1WI – Fat suppression sequence confirms – Fat-fluid level in cyst, ventricles common

– "dense" dermoid also hyperintense on T1WI

Page 8: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoid (large arrow, left) and fat droplets in SAS (arrows, right) are clearly seen.

Page 9: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoids, MRI with Contrast

• Unruptured– No enhancement

• Ruptured– Can have intense meningeal enhancement

secondary to chemical meningitis.

• MR Spectroscopy– Strong and broad resonances from mobile

lipids at 0.9 and 1.3 ppm

Page 10: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoids, Angiography/MRA

• Vasospasm may be present with rupture• Vessels encased by dermoid have an

increased risk of rupture.

Page 11: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoids, Prognosis/Therapy• Complete microsurgical excision

– Residual capsule may lead to recurrence – Rarely surgical remnants may degenerate in to

squamous cell cancer• Subarachnoid dissemination of contents may

occur during operative/postoperative course – Cause aseptic meningitis or other complications

(hydrocephalus, seizures, CN deficits) – Disseminated fat particles can remain silent without

neurologic changes

Page 12: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Dermoid vs. Epidermoid• Epidermoid = congenital inclusion cyst• Usual appearance is similar to CSF

– Appearance is not identical to CSF however• FLAIR usually does not completely suppress• T1/T2 may be slightly off, CISS/FIESTA show internal structures• Diffusion restriction is key• Can see internal structures on CISS imaging

• Mass interdigitates in cisterns, and encases nerves and vessels.

• Most common differential for epidermoid is arachnoid cyst.

Page 13: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Epidermoid in left CPA cistern is similar to CSF but not exactly like it. Note internal structures.

Page 14: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

DWI shows high signal from this epidermoid in the left CPA cistern.

Page 15: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Epidermoid that could be confused with Dermoid

• Rare variant – Uncommonly hyperintense to brain ("white

epidermoid") due to high triglycerides & unsaturated fatty acids

Page 16: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Epidermoid vs. Arachnoid Cyst

• Diffusion is key • Epidermoid is restricted• Arachnoid cyst is not

• Also epidermoids insinuate into adjacent tissues, arachnoid cysts tend to displace them.

Page 17: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Left middle cranial fossa arachnoid cyst shows no enhancement and no restricted diffusion on ADC map (right).

Page 18: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Craniopharyngioma

• Benign epithelial tumor derived from Rathke’s pouch epithelium

• Two Types:– Adamantinomatous type (classic)

• hyperintense cyst and heterogeneous nodule • More common in children (first age peak)

– Papillary type (more rare)• isointense solid component • More common in adults (second age peak)

Page 19: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Imaging of Adamantinomatous Craniopharyngioma

• CT: Partially calcified, partially solid, cystic suprasellar mass

• MR :– T1 without Gd

• High signal intensity suprasellar mass on pre-contrast T1WI (protein, cholesterol, blood products in fluid)

– T1 with Gd:• Solid portions enhance heterogeneously, cyst walls

enhance strongly.

Page 20: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Nearly cystic craniopharyngioma in the suprasellar space.

Page 21: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Craniopharyngioma, Locations• Relation to Sella

– Suprasellar (75%) – Suprasellar and intrasellar components (21%) – Entirely intrasellar (4%)

• Often extend into multiple cranial fossae: Anterior (30%), middle (23%), posterior and/or retroclival (20%)

• Rare locations :– Optic chiasm, 3rd ventricle – Nasopharynx, pineal gland, sphenoid (sinus, clivus)

Page 22: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Craniopharyngioma, Other Imaging Appearances

• Variable size– often large at presentation (> 5 cm)

• Effect on surrounding brain– Hyperintense signal in brain parenchyma

adjacent to tumor• Gliosis, tumor invasion, irritation from leaking cyst

fluid • Edema from compression of optic chiasm/tracts

Page 23: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Teratoma

• Midline mass – calcium, soft tissue, cysts, and fat

• Locations:– Midline from optic chiasm to pineal gland – Supratentorial most commonly

Page 24: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Teratoma, CT

• CT without contrast– Hyper, iso- and hypo-dense components of

fat, fluid, soft tissue, and calcification• Post Contrast

– Soft tissue components enhance

Page 25: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Teratoma, MRI

• T1WI– Hyperintense signal from fat– Variable signal from calcium

• MR helps characterizes relationship of teratoma to midline structures

Page 26: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Two examples of mature 3rd ventricular and suprasellar teratomas show cysts, solid components, and fat on non

contrast studies.

Page 27: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Teratoma, Prognosis

• Depends on size and location• Benign vs. Malignant

– 5 year survival for malignant teratomas is 18%

Page 28: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Teratoma, Variant

• Holocranial Teratoma in newborns

• Be suspicious of it in a newborn with an intracranial mass replacing nearly all normal brain tissue.

Page 29: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Lipomas

• Mass made up of mature non-neoplastic adipose tissue

• Congenital malformations, not true neoplasm

• Arise from malformation of cells in primitive subarachnoid space (meninx primitiva)

Page 30: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Lipomas, Location • Midline location common

– Supratentorial 80% • 40-50% interhemispheric fissure (over corpus callosum)

– may extend into lateral ventricles, choroid plexus • 15-20% suprasellar

– attached to infundibulum, hypothalamus • 10-15% pineal region

– usually attached to tectum • Uncommon

– Meckel cave, lateral cerebral fissures, middle cranial fossa – 20% infratentorial

• Cerebellopontine angle – may extend into IAC, vestibule

• Uncommonly in jugular foramen, foramen magnum

Page 31: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Lipomas, Imaging

• CT– -50 to -100 H (fat density) – Calcification varies from none to extensive

• MRI– Hyperintense on T1WI – Hypointense with fat suppression – Striking chemical shift artifact on T2WI

• Enhancement– None

Page 32: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Two examples of pericallosal lipomas. Left: nodular type with callosal agenesis. Right: tubular with normal corpus callosum.

Page 33: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Lipomas, Vascular Imaging

• Angiographic Findings• Conventional

– ACA courses directly superiorly if CC agenesis present

– Arteries & veins often embedded within lipoma

• Similar findings may also be seen with MRA

Page 34: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Lipomas, Morphology

Interhemispheric lipomas– Curvilinear type

• Thin, curves around CC body, splenium – Tubulonodular type

• Bulky mass frequent calcification, usually associated with corpus callosal dysgenesis

Page 35: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Neoplasms with Fat

• Lipomatous differentiation/transformation of neoplasm– Neuroectodermal tumors

• PNETs, ependymoma, gliomas is rare

– Cerebellar liponeurocytoma • Mixed mesenchymal/neuroectodermal posterior fossa

neoplasm • Primarily hypointense on T1WI, mixed with hyperintense foci

with patchy, irregular enhancement

– Meningioma • lipomatous transformation is uncommon

Page 36: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

Lipomatous Transformation of Meningioma

• Mature adipocytes from metaplasia and meningioma or from production of triglycerides by cells

• Rare variant of meningioma • CT

– Heterogeneous with heterogeneous enhancement – Can mimic necrotic malignant tumors– Demonstration of fat attenuation suggests a benign

process but differential diagnosis of an extra-axial fat-containing tumor should include lipomatous meningioma.

Page 37: Fat Containing Lesions of the Brain

SummaryDermoid

– Hyperintense on T1 can be heterogeneous on T2. No enhancement.

• Lipoma– Hyperintense on T1, no enhancement, can have calcifications,

look for CC dysgenesis• Craniopharyngioma

– Contains hyperintense T1 cholesterol/blood products, soft tissue, cystic structures and calcification, enhances

• Teratoma– Contains hyperintense T1 fat, soft tissue, cystic structures and

calcification, enhances