Primary central nervous system vasculitis (PCNSV) is a poorly understood neuroinflammatory disease of the CNS affecting the intracranial vasculature. Although PCNSV classically manifests as a multifocal beaded narrowing of the intracranial vessels, some patients may not have angiographic abnormalities. A rare subset of patients with PCNSV present with masslike brain lesions mimicking a neoplasm. In this article, we retrospectively review 10 biopsy-confirmed cases of tumefactive PCNSV (t-PCNSV). All cases of t-PCNSV in our series that underwent CTA or MRA were found to have normal large and medium-sized vessels. TPCNSV had a variable MR imaging appearance with most cases showing cortical/subcortical enhancing masslike lesion (70%), often with microhemorrhages (80%). Diffusion restriction was absent in all lesions. In summary, normal vascular imaging does not exclude the diagnosis of t-PCNSV. Advanced imaging techniques including MR perfusion and MR spectroscopy failed to demonstrate specific findings for t-PCNSV but assisted in excluding neoplasm in the differential diagnosis. Biopsy remains mandatory for definitive diagnosis.
CITATION STYLE
Suthiphosuwan, S., Bharatha, A., Hsu, C. C. T., Lin, A. W., Maloney, J. A., Munoz, D. G., … Osborn, A. G. (2020). Tumefactive primary central nervous system vasculitis: Imaging findings of a rare and underrecognized neuroinflammatory disease. In American Journal of Neuroradiology (Vol. 41, pp. 2075–2081). American Society of Neuroradiology. https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6736
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