Teaching NeuroImages: Burkitt dural lymphoma mimicking a subacute subdural hematoma
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A 59-year-old woman with no history of trauma presented with severe headaches and right-sided weakness. A CT scan showed a left hemispheric isodense subdural collection thought to be consistent with a subacute subdural hematoma (figure 1A). The patient underwent a single parietal burr hole for evacuation, but the neurosurgeon found subdural fleshy tissue and performed a biopsy. Immediate postoperative MRI showed a homogeneous hypercellular subdural mass (figure 1, B–F).1 Pathology was consistent with Burkitt lymphoma (figure 2). Retrospectively, the homogeneous density of the collection argued against hematoma. In nonemergent situations, an atypical radiologic appearance of a subdural hematoma may suggest the need for further radiologic investigations before surgical evacuation.2
Homogeneous crescent-shaped lesion. Isodense CT (A), iso–fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MRI (B), iso-T1 MRI (C). Restricted diffusion on MRI diffusion-weighted imaging (D) and apparent diffusion coefficient maps (E). Strong postcontrast enhancement on MRI (F).
Hematoxylin & eosin stain, 200× (A) and 400× (B) magnification: “starry sky” pattern: medium-size tumor cells and macrophages ingesting apoptotic cells. Immunostaining: CD20+ (C), Ki67: 95% (D).
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
B.M., C.V., and D.L. wrote the manuscript. B.M., C.V., A.N., K.M., H.A., M.F., and D.L. collected the data and reviewed the manuscript. D.D. and P.C. reviewed the manuscript.
STUDY FUNDING
No targeted funding reported.
DISCLOSURE
The authors report no disclosures relevant to the manuscript. Go to Neurology.org for full disclosures.
Footnotes
Download teaching slides: www.neurology.org
- © 2013 American Academy of Neurology
REFERENCES
- 1.↵
- Haldorsen IS,
- Espeland A,
- Larsson EM
- 2.↵
- Iwamoto FM,
- DeAngelis LM,
- Abrey LE
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