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Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical treatment of symptomatic Rathke cleft cysts: clinical features and results with special attention to recurrence.

TLDR
R Rathke cleft cysts are associated with a variety of clinical presentations and sometimes confusing intraoperative and pathological findings, especially after a partial removal, as in cases with squamous metaplasia.
Abstract
Object. Rathke cleft cysts (RCCs) are rarely symptomatic. The purpose of this study was to clarify the clinical, neuroimaging, surgical, and pathological features of symptomatic RCCs with special attention to their recurrence. Methods. This retrospective study involved 53 patients with pathologically confirmed symptomatic RCCs. There were 28 female and 25 male patients, ranging in age from 11 to 68 years (mean 37 years). Common clinical presentations included headache, visual impairment, and endocrine disturbance. The most common endocrine disturbances were hyperprolactinemia and diabetes insipidus. Most of these improved or were resolved after surgery, with the exception of diabetes insipidus and panhypopituitarism. The cysts were intrasellar with suprasellar extension in 33 patients, and ranged in size from 5 to 40 mm (mean 17 mm). In the 50 magnetic resonance (MR) images that were reviewed, the signal intensities were quite variable. Fourteen MR images demonstrated enhancement after an injection of Gd. Intraoperatively, the cyst contents were found to be yellowish (18 patients [37%]) and mucoid (25 patients [51%]). Pathological examinations revealed a pseudostratified columnar epithelium in 26 patients (49%). Abundant squamous metaplasia and a stratified squamous epithelium were also found in 12 patients (23%). Follow-up MR images revealed cyst recurrences that required a repeated operation in six patients. Statistically significant risk factors for a recurrence included enhancement of the lesion on MR images (p = 0.017), the extent of cyst removal (p = 0.012), and the presence of squamous epithelium (p = 0.008). Conclusions. Rathke cleft cysts are associated with a variety of clinical presentations and sometimes confusing intraoperative and pathological findings. Close postoperative observation with neuroimaging and neuroophthalmological assessment is necessary, especially after a partial removal, as in cases with squamous metaplasia.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical outcomes in 118 patients with Rathke cleft cysts

TL;DR: The high recurrence rate (18%) supports the theory that a relationship exists between a symptomatic Rathke cleft cyst and craniopharyngioma and improvements in visual and endocrine dysfunction can be expected after surgical decompression of the optic apparatus and the hypothalamic-pituitary axis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Craniopharyngioma and other cystic epithelial lesions of the sellar region: a review of clinical, imaging, and histopathological relationships

TL;DR: There is significant evidence in the literature to support a common ectodermal origin of selected sellar and suprasellar cystic lesions, which may account for the overlap of features and transitional states observed in some cases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgery for Rathke cleft cysts: technical considerations and outcomes.

TL;DR: Decompression and biopsy procedures in the treatment of RCCs lead to improvement in signs and symptoms, with low morbidity rates, and Repeated operations will be required but are also associated with symptomatic improvement, low mortality, and durable remission.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rathke's cleft cysts.

TL;DR: Rathke’s cleft cysts are benign, sellar and/or suprasellar lesions originating from the remnants of Rathke's pouch, and their natural history is not clear.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intracranial Lesions with High Signal Intensity on T1-weighted MR Images: Differential Diagnosis

TL;DR: In cases in which diagnostically specific T1-weighted imaging features are lacking, findings obtained with other MR pulse sequences and other modalities can help narrow the differential diagnosis: An elevated glutamine or glutamate level at MR spectroscopy is suggestive of hepatic encephalopathy; a popcorn ball-like appearance at T2- Weighted imaging, of cavernous malformations; and hyperattenuation at computed tomography, of mineral deposition disease.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical, radiographic, and pathological features of symptomatic Rathke's cleft cysts.

TL;DR: The clinical, radiographic, and pathological findings in 155 patients with symptomatic Rathke's cleft cysts are discussed, with the most common symptoms and signs being pituitary dysfunction, visual disturbances, and headaches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cystic lesions of the pituitary: clinicopathological features distinguishing craniopharyngioma, Rathke's cleft cyst, and arachnoid cyst.

TL;DR: This study investigates distinguishing preoperative clinical, biochemical, and radiographic features of patients with CR, RCC, and AC and identifies clinicopathological features that independently predict recurrence in CR and RCC in adults.
Journal ArticleDOI

Radiologic characteristics and results of surgical management of Rathke's cysts in 43 patients.

TL;DR: For symptomatic lesions suspected to be Rathke's cysts, the recommended treatment is simple drainage of the cyst with biopsy of the wall, when this can be done safely and follow-up imaging should be minimal for asymptomatic patients, and radiation therapy is not indicated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transsphenoidal management of 28 symptomatic Rathke's cleft cysts, with special reference to visual and hormonal recovery

Wael El-Mahdy, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1998 - 
TL;DR: Although comparatively rare and benign lesions, Rathke's cleft cysts are an important cause of hormonal and visual disturbances, transsphenoidal surgery is safe and efficacious and leads to excellent improvement of function in the majority of cases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rathke cleft cysts: CT, MR imaging, and pathologic features.

TL;DR: The authors retrospectively reviewed the clinical, computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging findings in seven patients with pathologically proved Rathke cleft cysts, finding signal heterogeneity of these lesions with focal components of diminished signal intensity of T2-weighted images.
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