Gliosarcomas are maling, rare, and dimorphic neoplasms formed by glioblastoma associated with sarcomatous components that may develop from the malignant transformation of hyperplastic vascular elements. We report three patients with gliosarcoma to analyze the correlation between neuroimaging and surgical findings, and prognosis. Clinical manifestations had a sudden onset, in previously healthy patients, and was characterized by a syndrome of intracranial hypertension of acute onset related to the development of an intratumoral hemorrhage. In two of our patients the tumors were observed as intra-axial lesions having large areas of necrosis and peripheral enhancement of contrast material. This finding is similar to that observed in patients with glioblastomas. The other patient presented with a well-defined and homogeneous hyperdense lesion the resembled a meningioma. In our series the patients with the longest survival was the one who had a lesion resembling a meningioma, in whom the sarcomatous component of the lesion predominated.