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Benign intraosseous skull lesion with predominantly vascular and some avascular components
Best clue
Sharply marginated expansile skull lesion
Frontal, temporal, parietal bone in decreasing order
Most often solitary, but multiple in 15%
Best imaging tool: Bone CT
Sharply marginated expansile lesion
Thin peripheral sclerotic rim in 1/3
Intact inner and outer table
Outer table often more expanded than inner table
Trabecular thickening with radiating spicules
MR signal characteristics dependent on
Quantity of slow-moving venous blood
Ratio of red marrow to converted fatty marrow
Hypointense trabeculae
T1WI
Hypo- to isointense
T2WI
Usually heterogeneously hyperintense (“light bulb bright”)
T1 C+
Enhances diffusely and heterogeneously
“Fills in” with delayed imaging
May have dural tail
Classified on basis of dominant vessels: Capillary, cavernous, or mixed
Most often asymptomatic
Calvarial hemangiomas rare: 0.2% of bone tumors
Rarely requires treatment
Osseous hemangioma, intraosseous hemangioma
Benign intraosseous skull lesion with predominantly vascular and some avascular components
Best diagnostic clue
Sharply marginated expansile skull lesion
Location
Skull: 20% of intraosseous hemangiomas
Diploic space
Frontal, temporal, parietal in decreasing order
Less commonly occipital or sphenoid
Vertebra: 28% of intraosseous hemangiomas
Size
1-4 cm
Morphology
Solitary but multiple in 15%; round or oval
Radiography
Sharply marginated expansile lesion
May have thin peripheral sclerotic rim
“Honeycomb” or “sunburst” pattern
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