Findings
There is demonstrate diffuse, nodular meningeal thickening and enhancement along the convexities, interhemispheric fissures, and skull base. There is associated underlying parenchymal edema within the frontal lobes.
Differential diagnosis
- Granulomatous disease (namely, sarcoid)
- Meningitis
- Metastases
- Meningioma
- Histiocytosis
Diagnosis: Neurosarcoidosis (dural and parenchymal involvement)
Key points
Multisystem inflammatory disease characterized by noncaseating epithelioid-cell granulomas; etiology unknown
CNS involved in 5% clinically (27% autopsy); 10-20 per 100k in North America
Involves
- Dura, leptomeninges, subarachnoid space
- Brain parenchyma to include hypothalamus>brain stem>cerebral hemispheres>cerebellar hemispheres
Solitary or multifocal CNS mass(es)
Approximately 50% have periventricular T2 hyperintense lesions
Perivascular infiltrative involvement Virchow Robin spaces
May induce a small vessel vasculitis
Clinical Presentation:
- Most common symptom - CN deficit(s); most often CN VII; up to 50% asymptomatic
- Age of onset – 3rd-4th decade; 3-5% children; M:F 2:1; African American: Caucasian 10:1
- Pulmonary involvement in >90% of patients (abnormal CXR in association with CNS involvement strong evidence)
Course/Treatment:
- 2/3 have self limited monophasic illness; remainder have chronic remitting-relapsing course
- No known cure
Radiology
CT:
- May show basilar leptomeningeal enhancement
- Osteolytic skull lesions
MR:
- T1 + Contrast
Wide spectrum of enhancement
1/3 have multiple parenchymal lesions
>1/3 have leptomeningeal involvement, nodular and/or diffuse
10% solitary intra-axial mass
5-10% hypothalamus, infundibular thickening
- FLAIR:
Approximately 50% with periventricular T2 hyperintense lesions
Hyperintense vasogenic edema secondary to perivascular infiltrates or small vessel vasculitis
- T2:
Lacune (brainstem, BG)
Hypointense material within subarachnoid space
Hypointense dural lesion(s)
Hydrocephalus
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