The Acute Superficial Siderosis Syndrome - Clinical Entity, Imaging Findings, and Histopathology

急性浅表铁沉积症——临床表现、影像学特征和组织病理学

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Abstract

Superficial siderosis is a consequence of repetitive bleeding into the subarachnoid space, leading to toxic iron and hemosiderin deposits on the surface of the brain and spine. The clinical and radiological phenotypes of superficial siderosis are known to manifest over long time intervals. In contrast, this study defines the "acute superficial siderosis syndrome" and illustrates typical imaging and histopathological findings of this entity. We describe the case of a 61-year-old male patient who was diagnosed with a melanoma metastasis in the right frontal cortex in February 2019. Within a few weeks he developed a progressive syndrome characterized by cerebellar ataxia, gait disturbance, signs of myelopathy, and radiculopathy. MRI revealed ongoing hemorrhage from the metastasis into the lateral ventricle and the subarachnoid space. A semiquantitative assessment of three subsequent MRI within an 8-week period documented the rapid development of superficial siderosis along the surface of the cerebellum, the brain stem, and the lower parts of the supratentorial regions on T2*-weighted sequences. The diagnosis of a superficial siderosis was histopathologically confirmed by identifying iron and hemosiderin deposits on the cortex along with astrogliosis. The recognition of this "acute superficial siderosis syndrome" triggered surgical removal of the hemorrhagic metastasis. Based on a single case presentation, we define the "acute superficial siderosis syndrome" as a clinical entity and describe the radiological and histopathological characteristics of this entity. Early recognition of this syndrome may allow timely elimination of the bleeding source, in order to prevent further clinical deterioration.

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