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Neuroradiology Case of the WeekCase 294 Ashwani K Sharma, MD and P-L Westesson, MD, PhD, DDSClinical Presentation: Patient is a 4-year-old female already diagnosed with neuroblastoma of thorax and imaging of head performed for staging purposes. Imaging Findings: Metastases of neuroblastoma occurs along the external surface of the dura and causes separation of the brain parenchyma from the bony calvarium. The dural metastases are continuous with subcutaneous deposits via the separated sutures. Sutural separation is nonuniform, and the sutural margins are indistinct due to bony involvement. The lytic bony metastases may produce localized calvarial thickening that may have a sunburst calcification.
Diagnosis: Calvarial metastasis from neuroblastoma with spiculated calcification Discussion: Neuroblastoma constitutes 10% of all pediatric malignancies and 75% of them present in children below 4 years of age [1]. Seventy-five percent of neuroblastomas arise in the abdomen and pelvis, 20% in the thorax and 5% in the neck [2]. Metastases in neuroblastoma characteristically occurs in a disseminated fashion the common sites being liver, lymph nodes, bones and bone marrow [1]. Calvarial metastases however, do occur in neuroblastoma and are characteristically multiple lesions with simultaneous involvement of the orbits [3]. References:
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