Diseases
|
Clinical manifestations
|
Para-clinical findings
|
Gold standard
|
Additional findings
|
Symptoms
|
Physical examination
|
Lab Findings
|
MRI
|
Immunohistopathology
|
Head- ache
|
Seizure
|
Visual disturbance
|
Constitutional
|
Focal neurological deficit
|
Adult primary brain tumors
|
Glioblastoma multiforme
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
|
- Pseudopalisading appearance
|
|
- Highest incidence in fifth and sixth decades of life
- Most of the time, focal neurological deficit is the presenting sign.
|
Oligodendroglioma
|
+
|
+
|
+/−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
- Chicken wire capillary pattern
|
- Fried egg cell appearance
|
|
- Highest incidence is between 40 and 50 years of age.
- Most of the time, epileptic seizure is the presenting sign.
|
Meningioma
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
- Well circumscribed
- Extra-axial mass
|
- Whorled spindle cell pattern
|
|
- Highest incidence is between 40 and 50 years of age.
- Most of the time, focal neurological deficit and epileptic seizure are the presenting signs.
- May be associated with NF-2
|
Hemangioblastoma
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
|
|
|
|
Pituitary adenoma
|
−
|
−
|
+ Bitemporal hemianopia
|
−
|
−
|
|
|
|
|
- Initialy presents with upper bitemporal quadrantanopsia followed by bitemporal hemianopsia (pressure on optic chiasma from below)
|
Schwannoma
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
- Split-fat sign
- Fascicular sign
- Often have areas of hemosiderin
|
|
|
- It causes hearing loss and tinnitus
- May be associated with NF-2 (bilateral schwannomas)
|
Primary CNS lymphoma
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
- Single mass with ring enhancement
|
|
|
- Usually in young immunocompromized patients (HIV) or old immunocompetent person.
|
Childhood primary brain tumors
|
Pilocytic astrocytoma
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
|
|
|
- Most of the time, cerebellar dysfunction is the presenting signs.
|
Medulloblastoma
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
|
|
|
- Drop metastasis ( metastasis through CSF)
|
Ependymoma
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+
|
−
|
|
|
|
- Causes an unusually persistent, continuous headache in children.
|
Craniopharyngioma
|
+
|
+/−
|
+ Bitemporal hemianopia
|
−
|
+
|
|
|
|
|
- Initialy presents with lower bitemporal quadrantanopsia followed by bitemporal hemianopsia (pressure on optic chiasma from above)
|
Pinealoma
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+ vertical gaze palsy
|
|
|
|
|
- May cause prinaud syndrome (vertical gaze palsy, pupillary light-near dissociation, lid retraction and convergence-retraction nystagmus
|
Vascular
|
AV malformation
|
+
|
+
|
+/−
|
−
|
+/−
|
−
|
|
|
|
- We may see bag of worms" appearance in CT angiography
|
Brain aneurysm
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
−
|
+/−
|
−
|
|
|
- Magnetic resonance angiography and CT angiography (Angiographjy is reserved for patients who have negative MRA and CTA)
|
- It is associated with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, pseudoxanthoma elasticum and Bicuspid aortic valve.
|
Infectious
|
Bacterial brain abscess
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
+
|
+
|
|
- Central hypodense signal and surrounding ring-enhancement in T1
- Central hyperintense area surrounded by a well-defined hypointense capsule with surrounding edema in T2
|
|
- Clinical presentation/ imaging
|
- The most common causes of brain abscess are Streptococcus and Staphylococcus.
|
Tuberculosis
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
+
|
+
|
|
|
|
|
- It is associated with HIV infection
|
Toxoplasmosis
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
|
+
|
|
|
|
- Clinical presentation/ imaging
|
- It is associated with HIV infection
|
Hydatid cyst
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
+
|
+
|
|
|
|
|
- Brain, eye, and splenic cysts may not produce detectable amount of antibodies
|
CNS cryptococcosis
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
+
|
+
|
|
|
- We may see numerous acutely branching septate hyphae
|
- Lab data/ Imaging
- since brain biopsies are highly invasive and may may cause neurologic deficits, we diagnose CNS fungal infections based on laboratory and imaging findings
|
- Cryptococcal meningoencephalitis is the most common
- It is associated with (HIV), immunosuppressive therapies, and organ transplants.
- In may happen in immunocompetent patients undergoing invasive procedures ( neurosurgery) or exposed to contaminated devices or drugs
|
CNS aspergillosis
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
+
|
+
|
|
- Multiple abscesses
- Ring enhancement
- Peripheral low signal intensity on T2
|
- We may see numerous acutely branching septate hyphae
|
- Lab data/ Imaging
- since brain biopsies are highly invasive and may may cause neurologic deficits, we diagnose CNS fungal infections based on laboratory and imaging findings
|
- Cryptococcal meningoencephalitis is the most common
- It is associated with (HIV), immunosuppressive therapies, and organ transplants.
- In may happen in immunocompetent patients undergoing invasive procedures ( neurosurgery) or exposed to contaminated devices or drugs
|
Other
|
Brain metastasis
|
+
|
+/−
|
+/−
|
+
|
+
|
−
|
|
- Based on the primary cancer type we may have different immunohistopathology findings.
|
- History/ imaging
- If there is any uncertainty about etiology, biopsy should be performed
|
- Most common primary tumors that metastasis to brain:
- Lung cancer
- Renal cell carcinoma
- Breast cancer
- Melanoma
- Gastrointestinal tract
|