Asymmetric fatty bone marrow of the petrous apex

Asymmetric pneumatization of petrous apex is a frequent normal anatomic variant resulting in asymmetric fatty bone marrow within the petrous apex. It is a common incidental finding on brain and skull base MRI.

Clinical presentation

Asymptomatic.

Pathology

Asymmetric pneumatization of the petrous apex results in the presence of bone marrow instead of gas. Normal marrow contains significant adipose tissue, and signal characteristics parallel those of scalp or orbital fat.

Radiographic features

MRI

The non-pneumatized petrous apex will show fatty marrow appearing hyperintense on routine T1- and T2-weighted sequences with no expansion of bone.

Confirmation is made by observing the complete loss of signal with fat-saturation sequences.

Asymmetric fatty infiltration of the apex may be observed as a conspicuous asymmetric high signal on contrast-enhanced images and could be mistaken for an enhancing pathologic lesion. Correlation with unenhanced T1-weighted images and use of fat-saturation techniques are necessary to avoid this pitfall .

Differential diagnosis

Other lesions with a bright T1 signal such as a cholesterol granuloma should be considered. Another differential diagnosis is a petrous apex effusion, but this tends to have intermediate or high T1 signal .

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