Introduction: Schwannomas are benign nerve sheath tumors that infrequently develop within the jugular
foramen, originating from one of the lower cranial nerves. Plexiform features are
an unusual pathologic variant, reported in up to 4.3% of all schwannomas. We report
a rare case of cranial nerve XI schwannoma with plexiform features.
Methods: Case report.
Results: A 38-year-old man presented with left sided tinnitus. Swallowing, phonation, vocal
cord mobility, and hearing were intact. MRI identified a dumbbell-shaped, heterogeneously
enhancing mass filling and expanding the left jugular foramen measuring 3.0 × 4.5
× 1.9 cm; CT showed tumor-associated bony expansion of the left jugular foramen (Fig.
1A-D). The patient underwent a left suboccipital craniotomy, which revealed a large
cerebellopontine angle (CPA) lesion having the classic appearance of a schwannoma
arising from XI. All CPA tumor was resected, with a small residual left extending
out the jugular foramen; all cranial nerves were anatomically preserved, and all stimulated
at 0.2–0.3 mA following resection—save for XI, which did not stimulate. The patient
awoke at his preoperative neurologic baseline. Postoperative MRI demonstrated expected
small residual tumor within the jugular foramen, and final pathology confirmed benign
schwannoma with plexiform features.
Conclusion: Plexiform schwannomas are rare tumors that represent 4.3% of all schwannomas, while
less than 4% of all intracranial schwannomas occur within the jugular foramen and
5.5% of these arise from XI, making a plexiform XI schwannoma exceptionally rare.
These benign masses arise from sheaths surrounding nerve fascicles and are characterized
by increased cellularity and nodularity, with internodular nerve segments. At present,
definitive diagnosis cannot be made preoperatively, although imaging may demonstrate
a hyperintense multinodular pattern with a thin, hypointense capsule wall on T2-weighted
MRI. As compared with typical schwannomas, plexiform lesions may be more invested
within the nerve-of-origin, potentially placing the nerve at greater risk. Correspondingly,
further study aimed at defining reliable imaging characteristics would helpfully inform
patient counseling and preoperative planning.