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Surgical Implications of Magnetic Resonance‐enhanced Dura

 

作者: Jamshid Ahmadi,   David Hinton,   Hervey Segall,   William Couldwell,  

 

期刊: Neurosurgery  (OVID Available online 1994)
卷期: Volume 35, issue 3  

页码: 370-377

 

ISSN:0148-396X

 

年代: 1994

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: Gadolinium;Head and neck neoplasms;Intracranial neoplasms;Magnetic resonance;Meninges;Neoplasms

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

THE PURPOSE OF this study was to assess tissue changes responsible for dural enhancement on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and its clinical implications. A prospective surgical, histopathological, and MRI study was performed in 73 patients with various types of disease, including meningiomas (n = 29), craniofacial tumors with possible direct intracranial extension (n = 21), gliomas and brain metastasis in close proximity to the dura mater (n = 9), and a variety of nonneoplastic processes (n = 14). Contrast-enhanced MRI was obtained within 5 days before surgery and in some cases within 3 days after surgery as well. Histopathological examination of the dural specimens was performed in all 59 patients with neoplasia and in selected patients with nonneoplastic processes. Dural invasion was noted in 18 of 29 meningiomas, 15 of 21 craniofacial neoplasms, 3 of 5 gliomas, and 3 of 4 brain metastases. In these patients invasion was focal and in direct continuity with the tumors. MRI disclosed that dura invaded by the tumor had a break in the continuity of enhancement, or that there was no discernible enhancement. Association between patterns of dural enhancement and tumor invasion of dura was statistically significant (P< 0.001). The thickened-enhanced portion of the dura represented reactive changes. Postoperative enhancement was seen as early as 24 hours after surgery and was shown histologically to be associated with vasodilation and reactive changes. Conclusions from this study are: 1) dural enhancement is a nonspecific reaction and may be seen in association with many pathological conditions; 2) a fairly uniform “enhanced dura” adjacent to a tumor correlated with a dural inflammatory reaction, whereas discontinuous enhancing dura indicated dural invasion; 3) a few false-negative cases of dural invasion (one extracranial and four intracranial neoplasms) underscore that there are some limitations of contrast-enhanced MRI in predicting dural invasion by adjacent neoplasms.

 



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