Cranial postoperative site: assessment with contrast-enhanced MR imaging.

Abstract
To define duration and patterns of postoperative contrast material enhancement, the authors evaluated magnetic resonance (MR) images obtained with gadolinium diethylenetriaminepataacetic acid (DTPA) in 45 patients who had undergone major intracranial surgery. Intervals between surgery and MR imaging ranged from 1 day to 40 years (median, 1.3 years). Moderate or marked brain and dural enhancement was noted in nearly every patient imaged within 3 months of surgery, but all brain enhancement was gone by 1 year. Abnormal dural enhancement was noted in every patient imaged within 1 year of surgery and in approximately 50% at 1-2 years afterward. One patient had persistent mild enhancement of the dura 40 years after surgery. MR images revealed enhancement in several sites not freqently recognized on computed tomograhic (CT) scans. Brain and meningeal enhancement with Gd-DTPA at cranial operative sites was more extensive and persisted much longer than is commonly seen on contrast-enhanced CT scans. Enhancement of the brain or pia mater does not normally last beyond 1 year, but dural enhancement may persist for decades.