Other Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors

Other Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors

Other Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors

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Overview of Other CPA Tumors - CPA's Other Players

  • The Cerebellopontine Angle (CPA) is a triangular CSF-filled space in the posterior cranial fossa.
    • Boundaries: Pons (medially), cerebellum (posteriorly/inferiorly), petrous temporal bone (laterally).
    • Contents: CN V, VII, VIII; AICA; flocculus of cerebellum.
  • This section focuses on non-vestibular schwannoma lesions.

⭐ Vestibular schwannomas account for 80-90% of CPA tumors; this note focuses on the remaining 10-20%.

  • Common

CPA Meningiomas - Dura's Loyal Companion

MRI showing CPA meningioma with dural tail sign

  • Second most common cerebellopontine angle (CPA) tumor (~10-15%).
  • Origin: Arachnoid cap cells of dura mater, often along posterior petrous ridge.
  • Slow-growing, benign tumors (WHO Grade I most common).
  • Clinical Features:
    • Hearing loss, tinnitus, disequilibrium (later than VS).
    • Cranial neuropathies (V, VII, VIII primarily).
    • Headache, ataxia with larger tumors.
  • Imaging (MRI with Gadolinium):
    • Homogeneously enhancing, dural-based mass.
    • Broad base against petrous bone.
    • ⭐ > The "dural tail sign" on MRI is highly suggestive of meningioma, seen in ~60-70% of cases.
  • Management: Observation, microsurgery, or stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS).

CPA Epidermoid Cysts - Brain's Hidden Pearl

  • Congenital, benign, slow-growing lesions; 0.2-1.8% of intracranial tumors.

  • Arise from ectopic epithelial cells during neural tube closure.

  • Often called "pearly tumors" due to shiny, waxy, keratin-filled contents.

  • Location: CPA (most common), sellar/parasellar, intradiploic.

  • Clinical: Often asymptomatic; may present with headache, cranial nerve palsies (V, VII, VIII), or hydrocephalus.

  • Imaging:

    • CT: Hypodense, non-enhancing, irregular margins, may scallop bone.
    • MRI: Hypointense on T1WI, hyperintense on T2WI/FLAIR.

    ⭐ Epidermoid cysts classically show restricted diffusion on DWI, appearing bright, distinguishing them from arachnoid cysts.

  • Treatment: Surgical excision; recurrence if incomplete removal (capsule adherence).

Rarer CPA Lesions - CPA's Eclectic Mix

  • Arachnoid Cyst: Benign; CSF signal intensity on all sequences; no enhancement; may cause bone scalloping.
  • Epidermoid Cyst: Congenital; "dirty" CSF (DWI bright); insinuates between neurovascular structures.
  • Dermoid Cyst: Congenital; contains fat (T1 hyperintense); may show calcification or rupture (chemical meningitis).
  • Metastasis: From lung, breast, kidney primaries; variable appearance, often solid enhancing lesions.
  • Brainstem Glioma (exophytic): Rare in CPA; infiltrative growth pattern.

⭐ CPA lipomas are rare, congenital, and show characteristic T1 hyperintensity and signal suppression on fat-sat sequences. Axial T2 MRI: Large right CPA epidermoid cystoka

CPA Tumors: Dx & Mgmt - CPA Detective Work

  • Diagnostic Approach:
    • Clinical: CN deficits (V, VII, VIII), ataxia.
    • Audiovestibular: Pure Tone Audiometry (PTA) for asymmetric SNHL; Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR).
    • Imaging: MRI (Gadolinium contrast) is definitive.

      ⭐ High-resolution T2-weighted sequences (e.g., CISS, FIESTA) are crucial for visualizing cranial nerves and tumor extent within the CPA.

  • Management Strategy:
    • Observation: Small, asymptomatic, elderly.
    • Microsurgery: Symptomatic, larger tumors. Goal: CN preservation.
    • Radiosurgery (SRS): Smaller tumors (<3 cm), medical comorbidities, residual/recurrent disease.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Meningiomas: Second most common CPA tumor; often dural tail sign on MRI.
  • Epidermoid Cysts: Congenital; restricted diffusion on DWI MRI; "pearly tumor".
  • Arachnoid Cysts: CSF intensity on all MRI sequences; usually asymptomatic.
  • Facial Nerve Schwannomas: Present with early facial weakness; differentiate from vestibular schwannoma.
  • Metastases: Rare; consider in patients with known primary malignancy (e.g., lung, breast).
  • Lipomas: Rare; hyperintense on T1WI (fat signal); slow-growing_._

Practice Questions: Other Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors

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The most common tumor of the cerebellopontine angle is -

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Flashcards: Other Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors

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Acoustic neuroma is seen in middle age in _____

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Acoustic neuroma is seen in middle age in _____

both sexes equally (females/males)

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