Diagnostics (Basel). 2026 Jan 10;16(2):224. doi: 10.3390/diagnostics16020224.
ABSTRACT
Background and Clinical Significance: Giant sphenoid wing meningiomas are generally viewed as skull base masses that compress frontal centers and their respective pathways gradually enough to cause a dysexecutive-apathetic syndrome, which can mimic primary neurodegenerative disease. The aim of this report is to illustrate how bedside phenotyping and multimodal imaging can disclose similar clinical presentations as surgically treatable network lesions. Case Presentation: An independent, right-handed older female developed an incremental, two-year decline of her ability to perform executive functions, extreme apathy, lack of instrumental functioning, and a frontal-based gait disturbance, culminating in a first generalized seizure and a newly acquired left-sided upper extremity pyramidal sign. Standardized neuropsychological evaluation revealed a predominant frontal-based dysexecutive profile with intact core language skills, similar to behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). MRI demonstrated a large, right fronto-temporo-basal extra-axial tumor attached to the sphenoid wing with homogeneous postcontrast enhancement, significant vasogenic edema within the frontal projection pathways, and a marked midline displacement of structures with an open venous pathway. With the use of a skull-base flattening pterional craniotomy with early devascularization followed by staged internal debulking, arachnoid preserving dissection, and conservative venous preservation, the surgeon accomplished a Simpson Grade I resection. Sequential improvements in the patient's frontal "re-awakening" were demonstrated through postoperative improvements on standardized stroke, cognitive and functional assessment scales that correlated well with persistent decompression and symmetric ventricles on follow-up images. Conclusions: This case illustrates the possibility of a non-dominant sphenoid wing meningioma resulting in a pseudo-degenerative frontal syndrome and its potential for reversal if recognized as a network lesion and treated with tailored, venous-sparing skull-base surgery. Contrast-enhanced imaging and routine frontal testing in atypical "dementia" presentations may aid in identifying additional patients with potentially surgically remediable cases.
PMID:41594199 | PMC:PMC12840299 | DOI:10.3390/diagnostics16020224

