A 37-year-old male who presented to our tertiary center with blurred vision, “not being himself”, and “acting funny” for 3 weeks. On exam, he was found to have a right homonymous hemianopsia, grade II papilledema and demonstrated all four symptoms of Gerstmann syndrome – inability to perform simple calculations (acalculia), or identify his fingers (finger agnosia), could not distinguish his left side from right (left-right disorientation), nor write out his name (agraphia). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain showed an extra-axial, highly vascularized 6-centimeter mass compressing the left parietal lobe.
He underwent a complete resection of the mass. Postoperatively, he had gradual improvement with complete resolution of agraphia, acalculia, finger agnosia, and left-right disorientation within a week status post resection. Tumor pathology indicated hemangiopericytoma/intracranial solitary fibrous tumor. On follow-up, he reported improvement in visual symptoms and no recurrence of the Gerstmann tetrad.