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Brain capillary telangiectasia (BCT)
Cluster of enlarged, dilated capillaries interspersed with normal brain parenchyma
General features
Common sites: Pons, cerebellum, spinal cord
Usually < 1 cm
CT
Usually normal
MR
T1WI usually normal
T2WI
50% normal on T2WI
50% show faint stippled foci of hyperintensity
Large BCTs may show ill-defined FLAIR hyperintensity
Moderately hypointense on GRE; profoundly hypointense on SWI
T1 C+ shows faint stippled or speckled brush-like enhancement
Large BCTs typically contain prominent linear draining vein(s)
Developmental venous anomaly
Metastasis
Cavernous malformation
Capillary hemangioma
BCTs represent 15-20% of all intracranial vascular malformations
Usually found incidentally at autopsy or imaging
Rare: Headache, vertigo, tinnitus
Clinically benign, quiescent
Unless histologically mixed (usually with capillary malformation)
Brain capillary telangiectasia (BCT)
Cerebrovascular malformation (CVM)
Capillary malformation
Not capillary “hemangioma”
Hemangiomas are true benign vasoformative neoplasms
Usually in face, scalp, back, chest, orbit
Less common: Dura, venous sinuses
Exceptionally rare in brain parenchyma
Cluster of enlarged, thin-walled capillaries surrounded and separated by normal brain (usually WM)
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