Abstract

We read with much great interest the article of Salunke et al.[[1]] Bone formation in meningiomas can be scattered, focal (eccentric or centrally). The latter is the case in our patient, a 50-year-old male who was referred for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from the temporal bone because of daily head pressure and tinnitus. MRI showed an incidental high-density lesion with central calcification and moderate perilesional edema at the right border of the lesion, most probably a planum sphenoidale meningioma [[Figure 1]].

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