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Letters to the Editor
7 (
1
); 181-182
doi:
10.4103/0976-3147.172160

A burning candle in the dark night-incidental intradiploic epidermoid cyst of occipital bone

Department of Neurosurgery, Bahçeşehir University Medical Faculty, Istanbul, Turkey
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Spine Center, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA
Address for correspondence: Dr. Murat Şakir EKŞİ, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of California at San Francisco, 500 Parnassus Avenue MU320 West, San Francisco, CA 94143-0728, USA. E-mail: muratsakireksi@gmail.com
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Disclaimer:
This article was originally published by Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd and was migrated to Scientific Scholar after the change of Publisher.

Sir,

Ectodermal squamous epithelial cells, entrapped during neural tube closure between the 3rd and 5th weeks of gestation, form epidermoid cysts or congenital cholesteatomas. Epidermoid cysts compromise 0.2–1.8% of all intracranial tumors and are benign histologically.[1] Intracranial locations for epidermoid cysts are cerebellopontine angle, parasellar region, middle cranial fossa, thalamus, corpus callosum, lateral ventricle, fourth ventricle, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, pineal region, brainstem, and intradiploic location. About 25% of all epidermoid cysts present in intradiploic location as expansible lesions, hence to our knowledge, incidental presentation as a soft swelling on occipital bone has been reported only twice in the scientific literature in English.[1234] We present a young patient with an intradiploic epidermoid cyst presented as a soft swelling on occipital bone and discuss its etiology, histology, radiology, and management strategies. A 27-year-old man admitted to clinic with a history of softness and irregularity on the back of his head just behind his left ear. On physical examination, the mass lesion was soft, nonfluctuant, and nontender to palpation. The patient was neurologically stable. Lateral skull X-ray revealed a hypodense area of 24 mm × 19 mm × 20 mm size close to the left mastoid process [Figure 1a]. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans revealed the lesion to be present in the intradiploic space. The lesion was lobulated, and it was iso- to hyperintense on T1- and iso- to hypointense on T2-weighted scans compared to cerebrospinal fluid, respectively [Figure 1b and 1c]. On diffusion-weighted MRI, the lesion was hyperintense [Figure 1d]. Surgical en bloc excision was managed through a paramedian linear-cut 5 cm incision [Figure 1e]. The contents of the cyst had a classical pearl-like appearance. Histopathological diagnosis was an epidermoid cyst. Postoperative course of the patient was uneventful. Epidermoid cysts mostly present laterally, compared to dermoid cysts, which was speculated to be due to migration of this malformed cystic tissue through developing neurovascular structures.[1] The deadline for epidermoid cysts to present as intra- or extra-parenchymal cysts in the brain has been determined by the time of neural tube closure, after which intradiploic variants appear. Computed tomography (CT) and MRI are the best imaging modalities for intradiploic epidermoid cysts. While CT depicts lytic nature of the bone and possible calcifications in the cyst, MRI can make it recognizable with diffusion-weighted scans, especially for differentiation from intradiploic arachnoid cyst.[5] However, still, routine sequences of T1 and T2 are required to make a differentiation between epidermoid and dermoid cysts. Dermoid cysts are hyperintense both on T1- and T2-weighted scans, whereas epidermoid cysts are usually hyperintense on T2-weighted MRI yet have variable intensity on T1-weighted MRI.[6] The patient in our case was harboring a lobulated lesion in the occipital bone, and the lesion had a heterogeneous intensity on both T1- and T2-weighted MRI. Nevertheless, histopathological analysis can clarify the final diagnosis in case of conflict. Epidermoid cysts are benign in nature; however, some catastrophic events have been reported in literature. Ormond et al. and Gadgil et al. reported cases of intradiploic epidermoid cysts that presented as hemorrhagic mass lesions.[78] One of the cysts was present in the orbita and was extending to the sphenoid bone, and the other one was in the frontotemporal bone. Both of them were impalpable and were incidentally diagnosed after mild headache, eye pain, and minor head trauma, respectively. Malignant transformations of intradiploic epidermoid cysts have also been described.[910] Our patient admitted with only a soft swelling on his head, which turned to be an intradiploic epidermoid cyst. After talking with the patient, surgical resection was planned, accordingly. The cyst was excised en bloc from the occipital bone without any complication. Intradiploic epidermoid cysts usually present as expansible lesions on the skull. Guridi et al. and Kuzeyli et al. described the two cases of occipital intradiploic epidermoid cysts presented as soft swellings on the cranium.[34] Despite the benign nature of intradiploic epidermoid cysts, surgery should be performed in suitable circumstances to prevent rare but possible catastrophic events or malignant transformations.

Figure 1
A hypodense zone is visible on the occipital bone close to mastoid process (a). A mass lesion, that is, iso- to hyperintense on T1- and iso- to hypointense on T2-weighted scans is visible in the intradiploic area of the left occipital bone (b and c). The lesion enhances on diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (d). The cyst has been resected as en bloc (e)

Financial support and sponsorship

Murat Şakir Ekşi, M.D. was supported by a grant from Tubitak (The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey), Grant number: 1059B191400255.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

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