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There Is A Prominent Multiseptated Lytic Area In The Left Posterior Parietal Bone Measuring 1.5 Cm In AP Dimension And 0.7 Cm In Left Right Dimension. In Height It Measures 1.1 Cm. The Inner Cortex Of The Skull,could You Please Explain This Condition?

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Posted on Wed, 5 Apr 2023
Question: Hi Doc, could you please explain below;There is a prominent multiseptated lytic area in the left posterior parietal bone measuring 1.5 cm in AP dimension and 0.7 cm in left right dimension. In height it measures 1.1 cm. The inner cortex of the skull at the level of this lesion is absent. It is unchanged since 4/10/2017 but does appear larger in comparison to prior CT of 4/3/2008. OTHER: Visualized paranasal. I'm trying to find out what rhoa mean above. Doctors at the hospital never mention anything about it and said I was health and I notice this on the report. Thanks ‐ Final result 08﴾/29/2018 7:47 PM﴿ ImpressionsPerformed At NO EVIDENCE OF HEMORRHAGE OR INFARCT. LEFT PARIETAL LYTIC LESION IS NOTED MOST CONSISTENT WITH A INCIDENTAL INTRAOSSEOUS VENOUS LAKE. NO CHANGE FROM 4/10/2017. RADIOLOGY NarrativePerformed At EXAM: CT HEAD W/O CONTRAST CLINICAL INFORMATION: Trauma COMPARISON: CT dated 4/10/2017. CT dated 4/3/2008. TECHNIQUE: Volumetric acquisition on a multidetector CT scanner with multiplanar reformats. A combination of automated exposure control and/or iterative reconstruction technique was utilized for dose reduction. Head without intravenous contrast. FINDINGS: VENTRICLES AND SULCI: Within normal limits for age. EXTRAAXIAL/SUBARACHNOID SPACE: No extraaxial collections. No subarachnoid hemorrhage. MIDLINE STRUCTURES: No midline shift. PARENCHYMA: No significant white matter disease. No parenchymal mass, hemorrhage, or obvious acute infarct. POSTERIOR FOSSA: Unremarkable. BONES: There is a prominent multiseptated lytic area in the left posterior parietal bone measuring 1.5 cm in AP dimension and 0.7 cm in left right dimension. In height it measures 1.1 cm. The inner cortex of the skull at the level of this lesion is absent. It is unchanged since 4/10/2017 but does appear larger in comparison to prior CT of 4/3/2008. OTHER: Visualized paranasal sinuses are clear. RADIOLOGY Procedure Note Interface, I Radiant ‐ 08/29/2018 8:07 PM PDT EXAM: CT HEAD W/O CONTRAST CLINICAL INFORMATION: Trauma COMPARISON: CT dated 4/10/2017. CT dated 4/3/2008. TECHNIQUE: Volumetric acquisition on a multidetector CT scanner with multiplanar reformats. A combination of automated exposure control and/or iterative reconstruction technique was utilized for dose reduction. Head without intravenous contrast. FINDINGS: VENTRICLES AND SULCI: Within normal limits for age. EXTRAAXIAL/SUBARACHNOID SPACE: No extraaxial collections. No
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Answered by Dr. Dr. Erion Spaho (1 hour later)
Brief Answer:
Benign bone lesion most likely.

Detailed Answer:
Hello.

I have read your query and here is my advice.Tere is only a lytic lesion of the skull, and no other pathological findings in the CT scan results that you uploaded.lesions of the skull may be caused by past trauma, eosinophilic granuloma, osteomyelitis, hemangioma, etc.Since there is no change or increase from the last CT scan and only a slight increase in size from 10 years, then you should not be worried much more than necessary.Periodic follow up by your Doctor and by imaging is sufficient and there seems to be no need for treatment.
Thanks.
Above answer was peer-reviewed by : Dr. Prasad
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Answered by
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Dr. Dr. Erion Spaho

Neurologist, Surgical

Practicing since :2004

Answered : 4493 Questions

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There Is A Prominent Multiseptated Lytic Area In The Left Posterior Parietal Bone Measuring 1.5 Cm In AP Dimension And 0.7 Cm In Left Right Dimension. In Height It Measures 1.1 Cm. The Inner Cortex Of The Skull,could You Please Explain This Condition?

Brief Answer: Benign bone lesion most likely. Detailed Answer: Hello. I have read your query and here is my advice.Tere is only a lytic lesion of the skull, and no other pathological findings in the CT scan results that you uploaded.lesions of the skull may be caused by past trauma, eosinophilic granuloma, osteomyelitis, hemangioma, etc.Since there is no change or increase from the last CT scan and only a slight increase in size from 10 years, then you should not be worried much more than necessary.Periodic follow up by your Doctor and by imaging is sufficient and there seems to be no need for treatment. Thanks.