Abstract
PURPOSE To describe the gadolinium-enhanced MR findings of Rathke cleft cyst correlate them with the surgical findings, and define those preoperative findings that differentiate this lesion from other sellar and juxtasellar tumors.
METHODS We studied 18 patients who were diagnosed as having Rathke cleft cyst pathologically. These patients were imaged with T1- and T2-weighted coronal and sagittal spin-echo sequences. Fifteen of these patients received gadopentetate dimeglumine.
RESULTS In eight patients, the cyst showed low intensity on T1-weighted images and high intensity on T2-weighted images. At surgery, the cyst fluid was cerebrospinal fluid-like or light brown in five patients, motor oil-like in one patient, and milky in two patients. In 10 patients, cysts showed isointensity to high intensity on T1-weighted images and had various intensity on T2-weighted images. All 10 contained milky fluid. In three patients the intensity of fluid was heterogeneous. A waxy nodule was found in two patients. The position of the normal pituitary gland confirmed by surgery in all cases coincided with enhancement on MR imaging. The variable position of the normal pituitary gland was clearly identified in the sagittal images. The cyst walls showed no enhancement by gadopentetate dimeglumine.
CONCLUSIONS Because Rathke cleft cysts show variable intensities on MR, the diagnosis is often difficult when based on MR signal intensity values alone. MR imaging with gadopentetate dimeglumine does assist in the diagnosis of Rathke cleft cysts. Diagnostic clues include the lack of cyst wall enhancement and displacement of the normal pituitary gland.
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