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Case 22 - Neurosarcoidosis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2013

Nafi Aygun
Affiliation:
The Johns Hopkins University
Gaurang Shah
Affiliation:
University of Michigan Health System
Dheeraj Gandhi
Affiliation:
University of Maryland Medical Center
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Summary

Imaging description

Evaluating a patient with multifocal neurologic symptoms is a diagnostic challenge for a neurologist [1]. Clinical symptomatology and imaging presentation of neurosarcoidosis is so diverse and varied, that it is one of the commonest differential diagnoses for a suitable case in board exams!

There is a wide spectrum of MR imaging findings in neurosarcoidosis. The spectrum of intracranial findings includes cranial nerve enhancement (Fig. 22.1), leptomeningeal enhancement (Fig. 22.2), and enhancing (Fig. 22.3) and non-enhancing parenchymal lesions [2]. Involvement of pituitary hypothalamic neuraxis (Fig. 22.4) is common, as is involvement of optic nerves (Fig. 22.4) [3]. Involvement of the brainstem (Fig. 22.5), the choroid plexus, and the ependymal lining of ventricular system (Fig. 22.5) can also be seen [4]. Involvement of the dura can lead to pachymeningeal thickening (Fig. 22.6) [5,6] and sometimes presence of dural-based extra-axial granulomatous mass that can mimic meningioma (Fig. 22.7). There can be intramedullary or extramedullary involvement of the spinal cord (Fig. 22.8) [7].

Type
Chapter
Information
Pearls and Pitfalls in Head and Neck and Neuroimaging
Variants and Other Difficult Diagnoses
, pp. 72 - 79
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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References

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Alraies, MC, Desai, R, Alraiyes, AH. Unusual presentation of sarcoidosis: involving testis, spinal cord and the brain. QJM 2013; 106: 781–2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Huang, JF, Aksamit, AJ, Staff, NP. MRI and PET imaging discordance in neurosarcoidosis. Neurology 2012; 79: 1070.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pawate, S, Moses, H, Sriram, S. Presentations and outcomes of neurosarcoidosis: a study of 54 cases. QJM 2009; 102: 449–60.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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