Pilocytc Astrocytoma
8-year-old female with worsening headaches and emesis. There is a predominantly cystic, T1-hypointense, FLAIR mildlyhyperintense, and T2-hyperintense lesion centered within the pons and left brachium pontis. The lesion extends towards the left cerebellopontine angle and prepontine space where there is partial encasement and slight rightward displacement of the basilar artery. On the postcontrast images, there is a minimally enhancing mural nodule along its posteroinferior border. The imaging findings are consistent with a pilocytic astrocytoma. Pilocytic astrocytomas are well-circumscribed, slow-growing lesions, typically demonstrating a cyst with a mural nodule. The cerebellum is the most common site of involvement, followed by the optic nerve and chiasm, and then adjacent to the third ventricle. The differential diagnosis includes medulloblastoma, ependymoma, ganglioglioma and hemangioblastoma. For more, visit our website at http://ctisus.com

Imaging brain tumors - 2 - Astrocytomas

T1 vs T2 weighted MRI images: How to tell the difference

Glioblastoma // what to expect

Brain Imaging - Ring Enhancing Lesions

1961: Yuri Gagarin Interview | BBC Archive

New drug effective at preventing growth of lower-grade brain tumors, clinical trial finds

What Symptom Does Each Multiple Sclerosis MRI Lesion Cause? Neurologist Explains

5 Cases in 5 Minutes: Musculoskeletal #1

imaging of Pediatric brain tumor

Understanding Low Grade Gliomas Video - Brigham and Women's Hospital

Spine tumors 4 – Intradural Extramedullary Lesions

CTisus' Most Popular Cases (Part 1)

July 2026 Quiz

Anaplastic astrocytoma: Adam’s story

CT Head Interpretation for Beginners - OSCE Guide | UKMLA | CPSA | PLAB 2

When Animals Surprise Photographers in the Sweetest Way! 😍

9 WARNING Signs of BLOCKED Arteries in Your NECK (Don't Ignore #5)

Interpreting MRI of the spine As simple as ABCD

Diagnosing strokes with imaging CT, MRI, and Angiography | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy

