Interactive Transcript
0:00
So, case number seven is a 73-year-old male
0:03
who had profound visual hallucinations.
0:06
Also delusions, gait difficulties,
0:09
a resting tremor, frequent falls,
0:12
and had some memory loss,
0:14
but the memory loss was minimal.
0:16
So the first MRI was in 2013.
0:19
This was an MRI of the brain without contrast.
0:22
This is the DWI here,
0:24
which does not show anything acute.
0:26
This is the GRE sequence,
0:28
where we do have a single small focus of
0:32
GRE susceptibility artifact right here.
0:35
We can't really make too much
0:37
of it on this initial study.
0:38
I'll show you on a later study what
0:40
this is going to turn out to be.
0:41
But on this initial study,
0:43
it just looks like a little punctate
0:44
focus of old hemosiderin staining.
0:47
If you look here on this non-contrast study,
0:50
the left IAC looks abnormal.
0:52
It looks like you can see here on
0:55
the right side, the nerve roots.
0:56
This is not a dedicated IAC study,
0:58
but you can see here,
0:59
it looks like there's almost like
1:01
a mass filling the left IAC.
1:03
So this is looking very suspicious
1:04
for a vestibular schwannoma.
1:06
I would have recommended that the patient come
1:08
back for a dedicated post-contrast IAC study.
1:13
Incidentally,
1:14
the patient also has a small left middle
1:16
cranial fossa arachnoid cyst.
1:18
These typically are of no
1:19
clinical significance.
1:20
The patient also had a partially empty sella,
1:23
which is always easier to see
1:24
in the sagittal plane.
1:27
And that's it for this initial study.
1:29
They then came back in 2014 for an
1:33
MRI of the brain with neuroquant,
1:35
and they also had an MRI IAC to shortly follow
1:39
that with post-contrast in 2014.
1:42
So let's take a look at the 2014 MRIs.
1:45
So this is the 2014 IAC study.
1:50
And you can see here on the
1:52
axial fiesta sequence,
1:54
there is indeed a mass here in the left
1:57
cerebellopontine angle cistern extending
2:00
into the left internal auditory canal.
2:02
So it projects through the porous acousticus.
2:04
It extends about two thirds of the way in the
2:06
left IAC but does not abut the fungus.
2:08
This is the T1 pre-contrast.
2:10
Here's T1 post-contrast.
2:12
You can see central necrosis within the mass.
2:15
And so this is a left-sided
2:17
vestibular schwannoma.
2:18
You note that there's no dural tail here that
2:20
would indicate a meningioma. And also,
2:22
typically,
2:23
meningiomas don't tend to extend
2:25
this far into the IAC.
2:27
Here's a look at it here in the coronal plane.
2:31
And then, other than this,
2:33
better characterization of
2:34
the vestibular schwannoma.
2:35
There's otherwise no interval change in the
2:38
appearance of the brain. So in 2014,
2:41
we also see that the patient has some cerebral
2:45
atrophy, mild to moderate in degree,
2:47
with a parietal and also an occipital
2:51
lobe predilection.
2:53
The patient then came back for an amyloid
2:57
study in 2017. So let's take a look at that.
2:59
That here is the brain PET amyloid study in
3:03
2017, and this is a weakly positive exam.
3:07
So when you look down at the lower,
3:09
you could say, oh,
3:10
I'm not entirely sure if there is
3:11
binding here in the cortex,
3:13
although I do see some here in the temporal
3:15
lobe. But if you look up higher,
3:17
it is definitely extending out to
3:19
the cortex in multiple regions.
3:21
So this is definitely a positive amyloid PET
3:24
study, albeit a weakly positive study.
3:27
In 2018,
3:28
the patient then came back for
3:30
an MRI of the brain and IACs.
3:32
So this is the 2018 study on top, the axial
3:36
and the coronal post-contrast.
3:38
And this again was the earlier study.
3:40
This was the 2014 Brain and IAC study.
3:43
And look how much smaller this left
3:45
sided vestibular schwannoma is.
3:48
Here's the coronal plane on the 18 study,
3:50
2018, and here's the prior study.
3:52
Here's in the axial plane on the 2018,
3:55
and here's the prior.
3:56
So this patient has clearly had some
3:59
stereotactic radiation therapy in the interim
4:01
since the prior exam. Then in 2019,
4:04
the patient had a CT PET study and we'll
4:09
review this on the summary slides in
4:12
PowerPoint because it's easier
4:13
to see in PowerPoint.
4:15
They then came back for an MRI of the brain
4:17
in 2021. So let's take a look at that.
4:20
This is the MRI in 2021.
4:23
The amount of cerebral atrophy in the
4:25
bilateral parietal lobes and bilateral occipital
4:28
lobes has progressed since this prior study,
4:30
which we see down here in the
4:31
lower right-hand corner.
4:33
So there has been progression
4:35
in atrophy over time.
4:37
That left-sided vestibular schwannoma that we see
4:40
here in 2021 is again significantly smaller
4:43
from that baseline study in 2014 due
4:47
to the stereotactic radiation.
4:49
The patient then went on to have an
4:51
FDG brain PET CT study in 2021.
4:55
This is the FDG brain PET CT from 2021 and
4:58
it showed statistically significant
5:00
hypometabolism in the bilateral occipital
5:03
lobes as well as within the bilateral parietal
5:06
lobes and within the left posterior
5:09
cingulate gyrus.
5:10
And this was confirmed on the
5:11
MIM neuroanalysis software.
5:13
There was no statistical significance
5:15
in the bilateral temporal lobes.
5:18
So case number seven again was a 73-year-old
5:21
with profound visual hallucinations,
5:22
delusions, gait difficulties, resting tremor,
5:25
frequent falls, and only minimal memory loss.
5:28
The initial MRIs were obtained in 2013 and
5:32
2014, and they show some cerebral atrophy with
5:37
a bilateral parietal and occipital predilection.
5:41
Quantitative volumetric imaging was performed
5:43
in 2014 and it did show some borderline, well,
5:49
statistically significant hippocampal
5:51
volume loss here. This,
5:52
as you can see here right at the border.
5:54
And there was also reduction in the occipital
5:59
cortices. It was down at the 9%.
6:01
And here the hippocampi were
6:03
statistically significant.
6:04
This is icobrain and this is neuroquant.
6:06
An amyloid PET study was then obtained
6:11
in 2017 and that was positive.
6:13
Here's the PET CT images.
6:15
Here's the PET Mr. Fusion.
6:17
Diffuse binding of the tracer
6:18
throughout the cortex.
6:21
This was the Tau PET study in 2019 seen.
6:25
It shows some tau deposition in the bilateral
6:27
occipital lobes, right greater than left,
6:31
as well as in the left parietal lobe and left
6:33
posterior cingulate gyrus. Relatively subtle,
6:36
but it is present.
6:38
This was the MRI in 2021,
6:41
which we saw progression in the amount
6:43
of parietal and occipital lobe atrophy.
6:46
This was also summary slides showing that we
6:49
had a left-sided vestibular schwannoma,
6:52
which improved after radiation. Here's 2014,
6:55
and then it had shrunk by 2018.
6:58
So these are both 2014.
7:00
This is 2018 axial plane and coronal plane.
7:04
And then I wanted to mention,
7:05
we had talked about that little focus of GRE
7:08
susceptibility artifact in the right frontal
7:10
lobe when the patient returned for that
7:13
follow-up MRI. The last one, in 2021,
7:17
was actually done on a three tesla magnet,
7:18
higher resolution magnet. And with that,
7:21
you can see.
7:22
It might be difficult to see for you,
7:23
but there's a punctate focus of T two
7:25
hyperintensity here and then some rim
7:27
hemosiderin staining. It's very small in size,
7:30
but if you magnify up, you'll be able to tell.
7:33
So this is probably actually a tiny little
7:35
cavernous angioma rather than just
7:37
a nonspecific hemosiderin focus.
7:39
And here was that incidental arachnoid
7:41
cyst in the middle cranial fossa,
7:42
which is usually of no significance.
7:44
This is the FDG PET in 2021,
7:47
where we had statistically significant
7:49
cortical hypometabolism in the bilateral
7:51
occipital lobes and bilateral parietal lobes,
7:54
as well as the left posterior cingulate gyrus.
7:57
This is again the FDG PET, but this is a PET.
8:00
Mr. Fusion.
8:01
This is fused to a T2. Here I
8:03
fuse it to the FLAIR.
8:04
Again,
8:05
the statistically significant hypometabolism
8:07
in the bilateral occipital,
8:08
bilateral parietal lobes.
8:09
Here's the bilateral parietal lobes again.
8:12
This is the surface map of that PET.
8:14
Again,
8:14
the hypometabolism in the bilateral parietal
8:16
and bilateral occipital lobes.
8:18
And so this is a patient with
8:20
dementia with Lewy bodies.
8:22
And what we see is abnormal deposits of alpha
8:25
synuclein. These are the Lewy
8:27
bodies here on histology.
8:29
This is what they look like in the lab.
8:32
And dementia with Lewy bodies is less
8:34
common than Alzheimer's disease.
8:36
So there's 1 million patients living with
8:38
dementia with Lewy bodies in the US right now,
8:41
as opposed to 6 million living
8:43
with Alzheimer's disease.
8:44
The survival rate is typically five to eight
8:46
years after diagnosis. Visual hallucinations.
8:49
If ever you see that in the history,
8:51
that's a big red flag for DLB because it's
8:53
present as an initial symptom in 80% of cases.
8:58
And you can have beta-amyloid plaque
9:00
deposition and neurofibrillary tangles with
9:03
DLB. Not as much as with Alzheimer's.
9:05
But you see,
9:06
it was enough to actually turn the amyloid
9:08
PET positive in this particular case.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.