1. Coexistence of mastoid, frontal and vertebral hemangiomas in a patient with diabetic neuropathy: Possible correlation between diabetic angiopathy and intraosseous neoangiogenesis
- Author
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Antonio Alessandro Biancardino, MD, Salvatore Marrone, MD, Federica Paolini, MD, Evier Andrea Giovannini, MD, Giovanni Cinquemani, MD, Rita Lipani, MD, Luca Ruggeri, MD, Jaime Mandelli, MD, Antonio Crea, MD, Giuseppe Vaccaro, MD, Domenico Gerardo Iacopino, MD, PhD, and Luigi Basile, MD
- Subjects
Mastoid hemangiomas ,Vascular neoangiogenesis ,Diabetes mellitus ,Diabetic microangiopathy ,Hypoxic-ischemic factors ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 - Abstract
Bony hemangiomas are benign vascular lesions with an expansive growth; usually they tend to obliterate the entire bony cavity. They are typical lesion of the spinal bones, but they can rarely arise within other bones of the neurocranium. Diabetic microangiopathy is a condition characterized by the development of aberrant vessel tangles anastomosed to each other due to dysregulated neoangiogenesis. We report the case of a 56-year-old woman, suffering from type 2 diabetes mellitus, admitted to the neurology department due to a reported worsening of paresthesias and dysesthesias of the upper and lower limbs. She performed a contrast-enhanced brain CT scan that showed the presence, at the level of the right mastoid process, of an hypervascular angioma. A subsequent MRI study of the brain and spine showed the presence of multiple bone angiomas, at the level of the right frontal theca and C7, Th3, and Th7 vertebral bodies. Due to the absence of further symptoms and clinical and radiological signs of intracranial compression, the patient did not perform surgery. A radiological follow-up was advised. Although possible pathophysiological correlations between diabetes and vertebral hemangiomas are mentioned in literature, vascular lesions of this type involving vertebrae and skull base simultaneously can be discovered in a patient with chronic diabetic disease. As long as these lesions remain asymptomatic, surgical treatment is not indicated, and the patient is followed over time with radiological follow-up.
- Published
- 2024
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