• Central neurocytoma (CN) = intraventricular neuroepithelial
tumor with neuronal differentiation
• Best diagnostic clue: "Bubbly" mass in frontal horn or body
• CT: Usually mixed solid and cystic mass with calcification
○ Rarely complicated by hemorrhage
• MR: Heterogeneous, T2 hyperintense, "bubbly" appearance
○ May be predominantly solid mass
○ Moderate to strong heterogeneous enhancement
• MRS: ↑ Cho, ↓ N-acetylaspartate; glycine peak at 3.55 ppm
• If "bubbly," "feathery," or solid intraventricular mass near
foramen of Monro in young adult, consider CN
• Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma
• Young adults, commonly 20-40 years of age
• Usually benign, local recurrence is uncommon
○ Surgical resection is typically curative
○ If incomplete resection, radiation therapy,
chemotherapy, &/or radiosurgery may be helpful
• MIB-1 (Ki-67 labeling) index > 2-3% = poorer prognosis
• Headache, increased intracranial pressure, mental status
changes, seizure are most common presenting features
○ Hydrocephalus secondary to foramen of Monro
obstruction. This is the classic
lateral ventricles attached to
ventricular mass in the body of
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