• NeuroImage · Aug 2010

    Case Reports

    DTI fiber tracking to differentiate demyelinating diseases from diffuse brain stem glioma.

    • Carlo Giussani, Andrew Poliakov, Raymond T Ferri, Lauren L Plawner, Samuel R Browd, Dennis W W Shaw, Tanya Z Filardi, Corrine Hoeppner, J Russell Geyer, James M Olson, James G Douglas, Elisabeth H Villavicencio, Richard G Ellenbogen, and Jeffrey G Ojemann.
    • Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, WA 98105, USA.
    • Neuroimage. 2010 Aug 1; 52 (1): 217-23.

    ObjectIntrinsic diffuse brainstem tumors and demyelinating diseases primarily affecting the brainstem can share common clinical and radiological features, sometimes making the diagnosis difficult especially at the time of first clinical presentation. To explore the potential usefulness of new MRI sequences in particular diffusion tensor imaging fiber tracking in differentiating these two pathological entities, we review a series of brainstem tumors and demyelinating diseases treated at our institution.Material And MethodsThe clinical history including signs and symptoms and MRI findings of three consecutive demyelinating diseases involving the brainstem that presented with diagnostic uncertainty and three diffuse intrinsic brainstem tumors were reviewed, along with a child with a supratentorial tumor for comparison. Fiber tracking of the pyramidal tracts was performed for each patient using a DTI study at the time of presentation. Additionally Fractional Anisotropy values were calculated for each patient in the pons and the medulla oblongata.ResultsRoutine MR imaging was unhelpful in differentiating between intrinsic tumor and demyelination. In contrast, retrospective DTI fiber tracking clearly differentiated the pathology showing deflection of the pyramidal tracts posteriorly and laterally in the case of intrinsic brainstem tumors and, in the case of demyelinating disease, poorly represented and truncated fibers. Regionalized FA values were variable and of themselves were not predictive either pathology.ConclusionDTI fiber tracking of the pyramid tracts in patients with suspected intrinsic brainstem tumor or demyelinating disease presents two clearly different patterns that may help in differentiating between these two pathologies when conventional MRI and clinical data are inconclusive.Copyright 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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