September 10, 2012

Biparietal foramen

Biparietal foramen are not an uncommon finding on a routine skull radiograph, but occasionally they can become "giant," simulating a lytic lesion.

Giant biparietal neuroforamen: The most important thing about this variant is not to mistake it for disease.  These foramina are not uncommonly detected in children, and a high-radiation dose CT can be avoided if the variant is recognized.


According to available sources, these foramina are heritable in an autosomal dominant pattern, and represent part of a spectrum of bifid cranium (bifid cranium at one extreme and parietal foramen at the other).

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1. Fein JM, Brinker RA. "Evolution and significance of giant parietal foramina" J.  Neurosurg. Vol:37. October, 1972.
2. Little BB, Knoll KA, Klein VR, et al. "Hereditary Cranium Bifidum and Symmetric Parietal Foramina Are the Same Entity." American Journal of Medical Genetics 35:453-458 (1990)

May 23, 2012

Greyhound skull


Skaphe (boat) + cephalus (head)  
&  Dolikhos (long) + cephalus (head)

Scaphocephaly/Dolichocephaly are descriptive terms for a skull that is abnormally longer than it is wide, with a cephalic index <75 for women and < 75.9 for men. Scaphocephaly/Dolichocephaly is the most common kind of simple craniosynostosis, comprising 40-55% of nonsyndromic cases.  Craniosynostoses occur with a frequency of 1:2000-2500.

Scaphocephalic/Dolichocephalic skull
(old left MCA infarct as well)
Scout radiograph of same patient

The cephalic index was originally devised by Anders Retzius (the same with the "space" named after him).  It's simply a ratio of the widest AP and TV distances of the skull.  (The TV distance is the same as the biparietal diameter, BPD). Virchow (the same with the "triad" named after him) pointed out that when a suture closes prematurely (in scaphocephaly, the sagittal), then the growth of the skull is restricted in the plane perpendicular to the suture, and compensate in the parallel direction.

The scaphocephaly demonstrated above is a simple form of craniosynostosis... simple in the sense that only one suture has prematurely fused, the sagittal.  Other simple craniosynostosis include brachycephaly (premature fusion of the coronal suture) and trigonocephaly ("keel skull," premature fusion of the metopic suture). Compound craniosynostosis involves more than one suture, such as in plagiocephaly ("skew skull").

Although certainly a morphologic/aesthetic issue, and frequently related to congenital syndromes, the craniosynostoses may also occur by themselves and have no other associated effects. One source mentions that the formation of craniosynostoses may have an effect on the underlying CSF spaces -- decreased/eliminated at the premature suture line, excessive in the areas of abnormally increased skull space

The concept of "appropriate" skull size is species-specific, since some animals are supposed to have skulls longer than they are wide... and you could just as easily call scaphocephaly "greyhound skull" since the greyhound is one of the many dogs whose heads are normally scaphocephalic:

The greyhound: a normally scaphocephalic dog



Although the two terms scaphocephaly and dolichocephaly are synonymous, the term dolichocephaly may be a more consistent fit with the other end of the spectrum, brachycephaly ("short skull").  Incidentally, between the two lies the more or less useless term mesaticephaly.

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1. Benson ML, Oliverio PJ, Yue NC, Zinreich SJ. Primary Craniosynostosis: Imaging Features. AJR 1996;166:697-703 036
2. Delashaw JB, et al. Cranial Vault Growth in Synostosis: Review Article. JNS  70:159-165, 1989