Abstract
We investigated nine patients with rhabomyosarcoma in the head and neck (6–53 years of age), using CT and MRI. The tumours originated in the paranasal sinuses (3), cheek (2), soft palate (1), orbit (1), sternocostoclavicular muscle (1) and parapharyngeal space (1). The histological subtype was embryonal in five, alveolar in three and pleomorphic in one case. The tumours enhanced markedly and heterogeneous on CT and MRI. The masses were isointense or gave slightly higher signal than surrounding muscles on T1- and heterogeneously high signal on T2-weighted images. In four tumours, multiple ring enhancement resembling bunches of grapes. This appears to be characteristic of rhabdomyosarcoma and probably reflects a component of botryoid-type rhabdomyosarcoma in which mucoid-rich stroma is covered with a thin layer of tumour cells. We have named this imaging feature the “botryoid sign”.
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Received: 9 March 2000 Accepted: 12 July 2000
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Hagiwara, A., Inoue, Y., Nakayama, T. et al. The “botryoid sign”: a characteristic feature of rhabdomyosarcomas in the head and neck. Neuroradiology 43, 331–335 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002340000464
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002340000464