# Clinical, Radiological, and Etiological Aspects of Pachymeningitis: A Study of 24 Cases

**Authors:** Yousfi Samah, Boulehoual Sahar, Yassine Mebrouk

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.61988 · Cureus · 2024-06-09

## TL;DR

This study examines 24 cases of pachymeningitis, highlighting its varied causes and the importance of MRI for diagnosis and treatment.

## Contribution

The paper provides a detailed clinical and radiological analysis of pachymeningitis cases over five years.

## Key findings

- MRI is crucial for early diagnosis and assessing pachymeningitis extent and complications.
- Tuberculosis was the most common cause, identified in 33.3% of cases.
- Idiopathic origin was found in 16.7% of patients, emphasizing diagnostic challenges.

## Abstract

Introduction and importance

Hypertrophic pachymeningitis (HP) is an uncommon disorder with varied etiological origins and heterogeneous clinical presentation. Establishing the etiological diagnosis poses a challenge, but prompt identification provides a treatment window, potentially leading to a reversal of symptoms. MRI is the reference examination, allowing not only the early diagnosis of pachymeningitis but also the assessment of its extent and importance, detection of possible complications, and suggestion of etiology.

Case presentation

We conducted a retrospective study involving 24 patients recruited over 5 years for who brain imaging had revealed the presence of pachymeningitis. The average age of the patients was 40 years, with a male-to-female ratio of 0.6.

Clinical discussion

Headache was present in 54.17% of patients. All the patients underwent MRI examinations utilizing different sequences, with subsequent Gadolinium injection showing localized and asymmetrical meningeal thickening in 13 cases, and diffuse in the rest. The cerebrospinal fluid study unveiled an inflammatory fluid characterized by a lymphocytic predominance and hyperproteinorrhea, noted in 50% of the patients. The histopathological analysis of a stereotactic biopsy conducted on an individual patient revealed non-diagnostic results. The etiological investigation was dominated by tuberculosis, which was detected in 33.3% of cases. Idiopathic origin was identified in 16.7% of patients.

Conclusion

Meningeal thickening is rare, and the multitude of potential causes makes the etiological investigation challenging unless they fall within the scope of secondary meningeal disorders; otherwise, a dural biopsy becomes necessary, and the prompt initiation of treatment, along with determining the etiology influences the prognosis.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** tuberculosis (MONDO:0018076)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HP (MESH:D014390), Meningeal thickening (MESH:D008580), Headache (MESH:D006261), Pachymeningitis (MESH:D008581), inflammatory (MESH:D007249), tuberculosis (MESH:D014376)
- **Chemicals:** Gadolinium (MESH:D005682)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

25 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11231805/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11231805