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Case Reports
. 2015 Nov 6;6(3):480.
doi: 10.2484/rcr.v6i3.480. eCollection 2011.

Interhemispheric lipoma: Interval development of an associated cyst

Case Reports

Interhemispheric lipoma: Interval development of an associated cyst

Grace S Phillips et al. Radiol Case Rep. .

Abstract

We report a case of an 11-year-old patient who underwent CT imaging for complications of sinusitis, and showed incidental development of an interhemispheric cyst in association with an intracranial lipoma over a 10-year interval. Cysts and lipomas are well described in association with dysgenesis of the corpus callosum. We present an uncommon association, of a new cyst in association with an intracranial lipoma, in a patient with a normal corpus callosum.

Keywords: CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
11-year-old male with interhemispheric lipoma. Axial postcontrast CT image shows left ethmoid opacities and a thin, rim-enhancing fluid collection along the lamina papyracea of the medial left orbit, consistent with a subperiosteal abscess (arrow).
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
11-year-old male with interhemispheric lipoma. Axial postcontrast CT images obtained at a level superior to the lateral ventricles (A at standard brain window, and B at expanded windows at levels) show a fluid-density, bilobed simple cyst along the falx, without rim enhancement, and without obvious extension into the lateral ventricles. There is a lipoma associated with the cyst (B, arrow) that extends from the right atrium of the lateral ventricle (C, arrow), adjacent to the choroid, to superiorly along the falx.
Figure 3
Figure 3
11-year-old male with interhemispheric lipoma. Midline, sagittal, T1-weighted image (A) from an MRI obtained 10 years before demonstrates a normal-appearing corpus callosum and a high-signal intensity band, consistent with an intracranial lipoma. Axial T1-weighted image (B) above the level of the corpus callosum, at approximately the level of the CT images shown in Figs. 2A-B, shows no cyst.

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