Differential Diagnosis of Intracranial Masses
- PMID: 39495879
- Bookshelf ID: NBK608601
- DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-50675-8_8
Differential Diagnosis of Intracranial Masses
Excerpt
The differential diagnosis of cerebral mass lesions includes neoplastic, inflammatory, infective, and vascular lesions, as well as incidental developmental anomalies. A differential diagnostic approach should be based on the patient’s mode of presentations and prior clinical history, as well as on a systematic analysis of imaging patterns. This includes anatomical features, such as intra- vs. extra-axial, predominant gray matter or white matter involvement, supra-versus infratentorial, single vs. multiple, as well as signal characteristics on standard MR sequences, enhancement patterns, and findings on diffusion-weighted imaging, and hemorrhage-sensitive and perfusion sequences. Here we will discuss primary and secondary cerebral neoplasms in broad terms and illustrate the most important tumor mimics.
Copyright 2024, The Author(s).
Sections
References
-
- Smirniotopoulos JG, Murphy FM, Rushing EJ, Schroeder JW. Patterns of contrast enhancement in the brain and meninges. Radiographics. 2007;27(2):525–51. - PubMed
-
- Kim DS, Na DG, Kim KH, Kim JH, KimE YBL, et al. Distinguishing tumefactive demyelinating lesions from glioma or central nervous system lymphoma: added value of unenhanced CT compared with conventional contrast-enhanced MR imaging. Radiology. 2009;251(2):467–75. - PubMed
-
- Nussbaum ES, Djalilian HR, Cho KH, Hall WA. Brain metastases. Histology, multiplicity, surgery, and survival. Cancer. 1996;78(8):1781–8. - PubMed
Publication types
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources