Oligodendroglioma MRI
Oligodendroglioma Microchapters |
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Oligodendroglioma MRI On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Oligodendroglioma MRI |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Sara Mohsin, M.D.[2]Sujit Routray, M.D. [3]
Overview
Brain MRI is helpful in the diagnosis of oligodendroglioma. On brain MRI, oligodendroglioma is characterized by a mass which is typically hypointense on T1-weighted images and hyperintense on T2-weighted images. Calcification is observed as areas of "blooming" on T2 decay component of MRI. T1 C + gadolinium shows heterogeneous contrast enhancement and diffusion weighted images help differentiate lower grade oligodendrogliomas from higher grade astrocytomas which have higher ADC values because of lower cellularity and greater hyaluronan proportion. MR perfusion (PWI) is 95% sensitive for diagnosis of oligodendrogliomas and 87% sensitive for distinguishing grade II from grade III oligodendrogliomas. On PWI, "chicken wire" network of vascularityresults in elevated relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) of grade II vs grade III and rCBV above the threshold of 1.75 demonstrates more rapid tumor progression.
MRI
- Brain MRI may be helpful in the diagnosis of oligodendroglioma
- Findings on MRI suggestive of oligodendroglioma are listed below:[1][2][3][4][5]
MRI component | Findings |
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T2 |
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T2 decay |
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T1 C + gadolinium |
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References
- ↑ Radiographic features of oligodendroglioma. Dr Henry Knipe and Dr Frank Gaillard et al. http://radiopaedia.org/articles/oligodendroglioma
- ↑ Stark AM, Hugo HH, Mehdorn HM, Knerlich-Lukoschus F (2009). "Acute Hydrocephalus due to Secondary Leptomeningeal Dissemination of an Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma". Case Rep Med. 2009: 370901. doi:10.1155/2009/370901. PMC 2797365. PMID 20052406.
- ↑ Image courtesy of Dr. Frank Gaillard. Radiopaedia (original file here). Creative Commons BY-SA-NC
- ↑ Image courtesy of Dr. Frank Gaillard. Radiopaedia (original file here). Creative Commons BY-SA-NC
- ↑ Image courtesy of Dr. Henry Knipe and Dr. Frank Gaillard et al. Radiopaedia (original file here). Creative Commons BY-SA-NC