3.8 Review

Management of pineal and colloid cysts

Journal

PRACTICAL NEUROLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 292-+

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/practneurol-2020-002838

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The increased use of MRI has led to more frequent diagnoses of pineal and colloid cysts, causing anxiety in patients and uncertainty for clinicians. Larger or atypically appearing cysts may require treatment or urgent management.
The widespread use of MRI has led to the increasingly frequent diagnosis of pineal and colloid cysts. While most are small and incidental, do not require long-term monitoring and will never need treatment, they are a cause of patient anxiety and clinician uncertainty regarding the optimal management-particularly for larger cysts or those with an atypical appearance. Occasionally pineal cysts, and more commonly colloid cysts, cause hydrocephalus that requires urgent neurosurgical treatment. More recently the non-hydrocephalic symptomatic pineal cyst has been described in the neurosurgical literature but there is controversy over this entity and its management. This review addresses the difficulties in managing pineal and colloid cysts and provides a pragmatic framework for the practising clinician.

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