Calvarial Hemangioma


KEY FACTS

Terminology

  • Benign intraosseous skull lesion with predominantly vascular and some avascular components

Imaging

  • 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

Pathology

  • Classified on basis of dominant vessels: Capillary, cavernous, or mixed

Clinical Issues

  • Most often asymptomatic

  • Calvarial hemangiomas rare: 0.2% of bone tumors

  • Rarely requires treatment

Coronal graphic illustrates a sharply marginated expansile skull lesion
with a slight honeycomb-appearing pattern from intradiploic trabecular thickening.

Coronal T1WI C+ MR shows diffuse yet heterogeneous enhancement of an expansile calvarial hemangioma
. Heterogeneity is a result of vascular enhancement combined with hypointense bony trabeculae.

Image shows a close-up view of resected calvarial hemangioma. Note the radiating spicules of lamellar bone
interspersed with vascular channels of varying sizes
.

Axial bone CT shows a scalp mass
with the spiculated bone
of an underlying calvarial hemangioma
.

TERMINOLOGY

Synonyms

  • Osseous hemangioma, intraosseous hemangioma

Definitions

  • Benign intraosseous skull lesion with predominantly vascular and some avascular components

IMAGING

General Features

  • 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

Radiographic Findings

  • Radiography

    • Sharply marginated expansile lesion

    • May have thin peripheral sclerotic rim

    • “Honeycomb” or “sunburst” pattern

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