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Translational Neuroscience and Clinics  2016, Vol. 2 Issue (4): 241-243    doi: 10.18679/CN11-6030/R.2016.030
Short Communication     
A "logarithmic spiral" in the brain: Images of an intracranial dermoid cyst
Meiqing Lou, Yaodong Zhao
Department of Neurosurgery, Shanghai General Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University, School of Medicine, Shanghai 200280, China
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Abstract  A logarithmic spiral is a self-similar spiral curve, which often appears in nature, e.g., mollusk shells. In the normal tissues of the human body, the cochlea is also an approximate logarithmic spiral. However, approximate logarithmic spirals are rarely, if ever, reported in tumors. Recently, we treated a 26-year-old woman with a one-year history of headache. Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging showed a possible brain tumor with radiological characteristics similar to a typical logarithmic spiral, which has seldom been observed before. Because of the obvious clinical symptoms and discomfort, as well as the possible presence of an intracranial tumor, we performed a craniotomy and tumor resection. Perioperatively, we found an intact tumor capsule, with contents that appeared like egg-drop soup mixed with hairs. A post-operative pathological diagnosis of a dermoid cyst was made. However, more interestingly, the logarithmic spiral could be described mathematically with a high goodness of fit. In this paper, we present this case with various clinical images.

Key wordslogarithmic spiral      dermoid cyst      brain tumor     
Received: 12 November 2016      Published: 30 December 2016
Corresponding Authors: Yaodong Zhao,E-mail:zhaoyd@aliyun.com     E-mail: zhaoyd@aliyun.com
Cite this article:

Meiqing Lou, Yaodong Zhao. A "logarithmic spiral" in the brain: Images of an intracranial dermoid cyst. Translational Neuroscience and Clinics, 2016, 2(4): 241-243.

URL:

http://tnc.tsinghuajournals.com/10.18679/CN11-6030/R.2016.030     OR     http://tnc.tsinghuajournals.com/Y2016/V2/I4/241

 
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