CASE PRESENTATION
A 57-year-old man presented with new-onset, generalized tonic-clonic seizures and worsening confusion on a background of recent hospitalization for pelvic fractures sustained in a road traffic accident 3 months previously. His medical history was noncontributory. Clinical examination revealed mild disorientation and confusion but there was no localizing neurologic deficit. Hematological and biochemical parameters were unremarkable. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain showed a rim-enhancing mass in the left frontal lobe (Figure 1A, B) with associated vasogenic edema and a dual-rim sign on susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) sequences (Figure 1C), favoring a diagnosis of pyogenic cerebral abscess. Our patient was treated with intravenous antibiotics and subsequently underwent surgery that confirmed the preoperative diagnosis of a cerebral abscess, which was successfully drained. Blood cultures were positive for Enterobacter species and echocardiography confirmed infective endocarditis of the mitral valve as a source.
Cerebral abscesses are a neurological emergency requiring prompt diagnosis and treatment.Reference Osenbach and Loftus 1 However, many clinical presentations are nonspecific, and the imaging features of pyogenic abscesses, glioblastoma multiforme, and mucinous metastases can overlap. The magnetic resonance imaging features of cerebral abscesses are well-described, typically demonstrating central T2-weighted signal hyperintensity, peripheral rim enhancement, and central diffusion restriction on diffusion-weighted imaging sequences.Reference Leuthardt, Wippold, Oswood and Rich 2 , Reference Rath, Hughes, Arabi and Shah 3 Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy is also a useful sequence showing lactate, amino acid, acetate, and succinate peaks in abscesses compared with lactate and lipid peaks in tumors.Reference Lai, Ho and Chen 4 Despite this, the confident discrimination between cerebral abscesses and necrotic high-grade gliomas can be difficult on imaging studies, particularly where the clinical presentation and diffusion-weighted imaging sequences are equivocal. Another routinely used sequence, SWI, has been described as a relatively specific discriminator for cerebral abscesses by demonstrating a dual-rim sign around the central abscess cavity.Reference Toh, Wei and Chang 5 The dual-rim sign consists of a continuous outer rim of signal hypointensity resulting from paramagnetic free radical production by macrophages and an inner rim of relative hyperintensity, postulated to represent granulation tissue in the abscess wall. In contrast, high-grade tumors such as glioblastoma form an incomplete and irregular rim of signal hypointensity on SWI (Figure 1D), which is thought to result from deposition of hemorrhagic products at the tumor periphery.
DISCLOSURES
The authors do not have any disclosures.