Brain masses, lesions, and other on imaging Flashcards
large solitary tumor within cerebral hemisphere with irregular enhancing margins and central necrotic core
glioblastoma multiforme tends to spread across the corpus callosum
multiple lesions at the junction of gray and white matter with surrounding edema
non seminomatous germ cell tumors
Rarely metastasize to brain but when they do they show up as mentioned
what is seen on imaging with cerebral toxoplasmosis
ring enhancing lesions on neuroimaging. Rarely seen in immunocompetent pts Seen in HIV pts
HIV pt with headache confusion and fever. Check for what?
cerebral toxoplasmosis
CNS TB presents with
subacute febrile illness followed by meningismus, focal deficits, confusion, and seizure
CNS TB on imaging
basilar meningeal enhancement hydrocephalus, tuberculomas (iso hyperdense encapsulated lesions with ring ehancement)
Mexican immigrant presents with seizure. think about
neurocysticerocosis
Multiple viable cysts 5-20 mm hypodense lesions in brain parenchyma
neurocysticerocosis
Name the condition
glioblastoma multiforme.
from glial cells and it grows so fast there are no calcifications.
seizure or focal weakness, headache worse on coughing or lying down.
34 y o woman with acute headache then generalized tonic clonic seizures. Felt fine until 6 hrs ago when she developed a 10/10 throbbing bilateral headache and blurry vision. She is mulitple HTN meds and never had a history of seizure.
Temp normal, BP 210/140 and HR 80 and neuroexam: awake and alert but oriented to person and place. See copper and silver wiring no papilledema on fundoscopic exam. CT shows loss of greay white matter differentiation in posterior occipital parietal lobes and this is the MRI. What does she have?
PRES - posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome
AKA
reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS)
what causes PRES?
often seen with hypertensive crisis,
chemotherapy agents (cyclosporine)
eclampsia, preeclampsia,
allogenic bone marrow transplant
medical renal dx,
autoimmune dx,
sepsis and shock.
what is posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome?
PRES
also called hyperperfusion encephalopathy
brain capillary leak syndrome
What is the pathophysiology behind PRES or brain capillary leak syndrome?
brain edema likely from diminished sympathetic innervation of the posterior circulation.
posterior regions of the brain are more susceptible to injury from high mean arterial pressures, which MAP increased in brain parenchyma and subseqent vasogenic edema
which areas of the brain are most susceptible to PRES?
parietal and occipital lobes, then the frontal lobes and inferior temporal occipital junction and cerebellum
rare case reports of brainstem and cervical cords.
Treatment of PRES:
lowering BP - no more than 25% in first 6 hrs
stop any precipitating drugs
antiepileptic therapy for seizures
most pts are experience reversal in symptoms within 2 weeks.
Must also need to get imaging. MRI imaging to rule out stroke or ICP