CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 · Indian J Radiol Imaging 2020; 30(02): 116-125
DOI: 10.4103/ijri.IJRI_17_20
Neuroimaging

Cranial nerve schwannoma – A pictorial essay

Sivaramalingam Geethapriya
Department of Radiology, Apollo Cancer Institutes, Padma Complex, Anna Salai, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
,
Jayaraj Govindaraj
Department of Radiology, Apollo Cancer Institutes, Padma Complex, Anna Salai, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
,
Bagyam Raghavan
Department of Radiology, Apollo Cancer Institutes, Padma Complex, Anna Salai, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
,
Banupriya Ramakrishnan
Department of Radiology, Apollo Cancer Institutes, Padma Complex, Anna Salai, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
,
Rasheed Arafath
Department of Radiology, Apollo Cancer Institutes, Padma Complex, Anna Salai, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
,
Sathyashree Vishwanathan
Department of Radiology, Apollo Cancer Institutes, Padma Complex, Anna Salai, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
,
Murali Krishna
Department of Radiology, Apollo Cancer Institutes, Padma Complex, Anna Salai, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
› Author Affiliations
Financial support and sponsorship Nil.

Abstract

Schwannomas are peripheral nerve sheath tumours arising from cranial, spinal or peripheral nerves. Most of the schwannomas are benign with the rare possibility of malignant transformation. Cranial nerve schwannomas can be seen along the course of any cranial nerve in the intracranial region or head and neck location. Although a majority are solitary sporadic lesions, multiple schwannomas can be seen in syndromes like neurofibromatosis type 2 and rarely in type 1. Since intracranial schwannomas are slow-growing, clinical presentation varies between no symptoms to cranial nerve palsy. Most of the times, the symptoms are due to mass effect over the adjacent structures, foraminal widening, compression of other cranial nerves, denervation injury or hydrocephalus. Familiarity with the course of the cranial nerves, imaging appearances and clinical presentation of schwannomas helps in accurate diagnosis and possible differential diagnosis, especially in uncommon clinical and radiological appearances. In this pictorial review, we illustrate relevant anatomy of cranial nerves, imaging features of schwannomas of most of the cranial nerves, clinical presentation and differential diagnosis.



Publication History

Received: 07 January 2020

Accepted: 09 April 2020

Article published online:
19 July 2021

© 2020. Indian Radiological Association. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial-License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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