4.3 Article

Imaging of the sellar and parasellar regions

Journal

CLINICAL IMAGING
Volume 77, Issue -, Pages 254-275

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.clinimag.2021.05.022

Keywords

Pituitary gland; Infundibulum; Parasellar region; Skull base; Pituitary adenomas

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This review provides a brief overview of pituitary and parasellar anatomy, focusing on the imaging features of common and rare pituitary pathologies with clinical management implications. Imaging and basic clinical history often lead to a specific diagnosis or narrowed differential, potentially eliminating the need for surgical intervention in certain cases. Localization of abnormalities and recognition of characteristic imaging features are crucial for diagnosing pathologies in the pituitary region, guiding treatment planning for biopsy or resection.
Although a wide variety of pathologies can occur in the limited anatomic space within and surrounding the sella turcica only a few are common. This review aims to briefly summarize pituitary and parasellar anatomy and provide a focused description of the imaging features of both common and rare pituitary pathologies. Diagnoses of imaging findings with important implications for clinical management are highlighted. MR is the primary diagnostic modality for evaluation of this anatomic region. CT supplements MR in the evaluation of pathologies involving the bony sella turcica while angiography or nuclear medicine plays a limited clinical role. Despite the wide array of pathologies, imaging and basic clinical history will frequently yield a specific diagnosis or narrow differential. In certain pathologies such as hypophysitis or pituitary hyperplasia, proper imaging interpretation may obviate the need for surgical biopsy or resection. The two key elements to diagnosis in the pituitary region are localization of the abnormality and recognition of characteristic imaging features for different pathologies. Localization is particularly important in separating parasellar masses such as meningiomas, skull base tumors, carotid aneurysms, craniopharyngiomas, or sphenoid sinus tumors from pituitary masses. Imaging features are often variable and in some cases such as craniopharyngioma or epidermoid, can be almost pathognomonic. In cases of neoplastic pathology, imaging both provides diagnostic information and guides planning of surgical biopsy or resection. In most cases, biopsy or resection is performed though a trans-sphenoidal endoscopic route, and identifying invasion or the suprasellar cistern, skull base, or cavernous sinuses is critical.

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