Spontaneous Reduction Of Intracranial Arachnoid Cysts: A Complete Review
Russo, N., Domenicucci, M., Beccaglia, M. R., & Santoro, A. (2008). spontaneous reduction of intracranial arachnoid cysts: a complete review. British journal of neurosurgery, 22(5), 626–629. https://doi.org/10.1080/02688690802295652
View Original Source →Abstract
The aetiopathology, clinical features and treatment of arachnoid cysts (AC) are still extremely controversial topics. The posterior fossa is the second most common site of these lesions, since they are often detected in the cerebellar or cerebellar-cistern region. Despite this, almost all the cases of non-surgical reduction of an AC reported in literature concern cysts of the middle fossa, whereas only two cases of spontaneous reduction of a posterior fossa AC has been described in literature. A complete review of the literature regarding this topic has been collected and discussed. The authors present a case of spontaneous reduction of an arachnoid cyst situated along the midline of the posterior cranial fossa with regression of all neurological symptoms. This 43-year-old man presented increasing nuchal headache with vomiting and nausea, simulating subarachnoid haemorrhage. CT and MRI documented an arachnoid cyst along the midline of the posterior fossa compressing the mesencephalon. The patient did not present any family history of this pathology nor had suffered head trauma. The patient was only given analgesics to relieve painful symptoms. After 30 days, spontaneous resolution of all the neurological symptoms took place. A 2 months, MRI control documented marked reduction of the cyst without any evident brain compression. The feasibility of a wait and see policy in such cases is discussed.
Case Details
Disease Location
Superior cerebellar vermis (posterior cranial fossa)
Personal Characteristics
43 -year-old male, no family history of arachnoid cysts (ac), no head injury experienced increasing an eventually occipital headaches, had nausea, neck rigidity, no neurological involvement
Clinical Characteristics
Arachnoid cyst along the posterior cranial fossa that compressed the mesencephalic tegmentum, pineal gland and mesencephalic aqueduct as imaged using MRI and CT posterior fossa is second most common site for these lesions cervical x-rays showed rectification of the cervical spine witho lesions subarachnoid hemorrhage was original suspicion, CT was normal except for a voluminous, hypodense area (20mm x 40mm) localized in the superior cerebellar vermis--was interpreted as the ac compression posterior cerebral trunk MRI used gadolinium to confirm ac no signs of hydrocephalus
Remission Characteristics
30 days after admission, all neurological symptoms remissed 2 months MRI follow-up recorded cyst reduction without brain compression ventricular size was slightly smaller at 2 months
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Cystic fluid drains into subarachnoid space via the communication between compartments cyst remission is related to the closeness to the cistern magna, the IV ventricle and the cistern of cerebello-pontine angle.
Clinical Treatment
Analgesics for pain symptoms (aspirin)
Non-Clinical Treatment
None reported