A case of cranial hypertrophic pachymeningitis of unknown etiology in a patient with 15-year history of headaches, cranial nerve palsies, and gait disturbance is reported. A 77-year-old woman was brought to our institute in a coma. CT revealed intracerebral hemorrhage in the right temporal lobe and thickening of the falx and tentorium. Fifteen years previously the patient had undergone CT scanning because of headaches, cranial nerve palsies, and progressive gait disturbance and a thickened tentorium, mild hydrocephalus and edematous change in the right temporal lobe had been reported. Since the etiology of her symptoms was unclear at the time, she did not receive adequate treatment. Her symptoms gradually progressed thereafter, and her visual acuity and hearing deteriorated. MR imaging in 1994 showed the thickened tentorium as a hypointense area with hyperintense edges on Gd-DTPA enhanced images. Angiography revealed narrowing of posterior portion of the superior sagittal sinus. The patient's condition rapidly deteriorated due to the intracranial hypertension and she subsequently died. Autopsy revealed a thickened tentorium with xanthochromic surface. This hypertrophic change was also seen in the dura mater of the posterior and middle cranial fossa. Microscopic examination of the thickened tentorium revealed extensive fibrous tissue with a chronic inflammatory infiltrate, predominantly of lymphocytes. No specific lesions were revealed by staining with hematoxylin-eosin, PAS, Gram's or Ziehl-Neelsen stains. The patient had no inflammatory or infectious diseases of other organs, and a diagnosis of idiopathic cranial hypertrophic pachymeningitis of unknown etiology was made. Considering the above findings, the thickened tentorium depicted as a hypointense area on the T1- and T2-weighted images and the Gd-enhanced edges of the tentorium are thought to be represent fibrous tissue and inflammatory regions, respectively.