Interactive Transcript
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So, case number four is a 72-year-old
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with memory loss.
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They had an MRI of the brain in 2014
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with quantitative volumetrics.
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We look here at the DWI,
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and I don't see any evidence of an acute infarct.
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This is the GRE sequence,
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and we see this area of prominent susceptibility
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artifact here in the left frontal lobe.
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So, let's take a closer look at that
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on the T2-weighted image.
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On the T2-weighted image,
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there's central T2 hyperintensity
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with that surrounding zone of old
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hemosiderin staining.
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On the FLAIR,
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central FLAIR hyperintensity, again,
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with surrounding zone of old hemosiderin staining.
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This is the classic appearance
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of a cavernous angioma.
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On the FLAIR sequence,
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we see only trace microvascular
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ischemic disease.
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Really not much at all.
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The patient has moderate cerebral
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atrophy with a biparietal predilection.
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You see how prominent the sulci are
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in the parietal lobes,
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and really only very mild temporal lobe atrophy.
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Now, in 2014,
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the patient then went on to
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have an FDG brain PET CT.
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And this is the brain PET CT, which,
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when I ran this through the MEM
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neural analysis software,
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it showed statistically significant
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hypometabolism in the bilateral parietal lobes
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and within the bilateral posterior cingulate gyri.
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There was mild hypometabolism in the
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bilateral temporal lobes here,
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but it wasn't statistically
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significant in the temporal lobes.
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So you can see how useful using
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something like a MEM neuroanalysis
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software is, because sometimes,
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with just visual inspection,
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it's really hard to tell what would
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have been statistically significant
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compared to a normative database.
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But that's what this PET showed.
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The patient then returned for
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an MRI of the brain in 2016.
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So let's take a look at that
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when we look at the study.
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Here's the old study from
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2014 on the left.
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And here is the new study
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from 2016 on the right.
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We can see that there's progression
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in atrophy again,
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at least moderate in degree,
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in the bilateral parietal lobes.
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There's also some progression
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in temporal lobe atrophy,
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but it's still very mild in degree
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in the temporal lobes,
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really not too much to speak of.
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And the cavernous angioma that we saw
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before is really unchanged since
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the prior study. Then, in 2016,
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the patient also went on to
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have an amyloid PET study.
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And this is the amyloid study here.
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And you can see it's
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diffusely positive,
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so binding of that amyloid tracer
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throughout the cortex.
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The entire brain looks dark.
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This is a positive amyloid study.
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The patient then returned for an MRI
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of the brain two years later.
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And when they returned two years
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later, this is the 2018 study.
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So 2018, 2016 and 2014.
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And now we're finally starting
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to see some significant.
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Progression in atrophy in the
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bilateral temporal lobes.
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This is what it was on
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the prior studies.
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And now look at the size of the
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temporal horns and the size of the
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psalci at this point in time.
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So this fourth case, again,
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was a 72-year-old with memory loss.
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There was their MRI in 2014.
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Not too much in the way of atrophy
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in the temporal lobes,
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really only mild in degree.
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A quantitative volumetric study was
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done in 2014 with this MRI,
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and that was totally normal that,
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you see,
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the hippocampal volumes are actually
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above the mean for patient
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age at that time.
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And here are the inferior
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lateral ventricles,
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right exactly where they're supposed
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to be. This is NeuroQuant.
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This is icobrain.
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These are both negative.
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The patient then had the FDG
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brain PET CT in 2014,
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the brain PET CT showed hypometabolism
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here in the bilateral temporal lobes,
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but it wasn't statistically
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significant.
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This is the PET CT fusion.
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This is the PET MR.
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Fusion. And again,
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you can see how helpful it is running
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it through the MIM Neuroanalysis
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software,
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because by visual inspection alone,
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I probably might have thought that
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was statistically significant,
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but it wasn't. However,
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there was statistically significant
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hypometabolism in the bilateral parietal
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lobes and in the bilateral
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posterior cingulate gyrus.
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This is a look here at the icobrain
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study in 2014, which was negative.
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This again is summarizing
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what we saw here,
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the cavernous angioma and
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the left frontal lobe.
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The patient had come back in 2016.
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We still didn't see a lot of atrophy
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in the temporal lobes,
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although a little more than before.
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And they had an amyloid PET in 2016.
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This is the PET CT fusion.
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This is the amyloid PET MR.
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Fusion. Diffusely positive.
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So this patient has Alzheimer's
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disease.
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And then finally, we start to see some
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atrophy, now moderate in degree,
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in the bilateral temporal lobes when
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they came back two years later.
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And the reason I show this case is
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to emphasize the importance of
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encouraging your referrers to order
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quantitative volumetric imaging every
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time the patient comes back
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for subsequent imaging,
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because quantitative analysis is
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really just a volumetric snapshot
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at one point in time.
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And what we want to see is that sort
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of rapid drop-off in the normative
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percentile if we're concerned
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about Alzheimer's disease.
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So it's important to keep ordering
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those quant studies with
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every follow-up study.
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