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Vascular Dementia, Alzheimer's, and Amyloid Angiopathy

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0:00

Okay,

0:01

so case number six is a 70-year-old with memory loss.

0:05

This is the initial brain MRI in 2020.

0:09

We see the DWI sequence here.

0:11

No acute infarcts.

0:13

The GRE sequence is significantly abnormal.

0:17

You see multiple little foci of

0:20

old hemosiderin staining.

0:22

Here's one here in the left temporal lobe.

0:24

Here's another in the left occipital region.

0:28

There's another little punctate focus here.

0:31

Here's a focus in the left frontal lobe.

0:35

Here's one in the left occipital lobe,

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one in the right occipital lobe.

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And then a lot of foci here

0:40

throughout the cerebellum.

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There's actually superficial sclerosis that we see

0:44

here in the bilateral cerebellar hemispheres.

0:46

So this has the appearance of cerebral amyloid

0:49

angiopathy. If we look at the flare sequence,

0:52

we have multiple old infarcts.

0:54

So here's some old areas of cortical

0:57

encephalomalacia,

0:58

surrounding gliosis and the

0:59

bilateral occipital lobes.

1:01

Here is a larger old infarct in the left parietal

1:05

lobe extending out here to the cortex.

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Here's another infarct here.

1:10

And then we also have several

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scattered old infarcts.

1:13

These are in the subcortical white matter.

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This one actually abuts the left primary motor

1:19

cortex. Here's the central sulcus here.

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So this is the precentral gyrus

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of the left frontal lobe.

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Here's another cortical infarct in the postcentral gyrus

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of the left parietal lobe.

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So a lot of old infarcts here.

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In addition,

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there's moderate cerebral atrophy with

1:36

a bilateral temporal predilection.

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And we also have, in addition,

1:42

all these old infarcts.

1:43

We have at least baseline moderate microvascular

1:45

ischemic disease. Incidentally,

1:48

there's some moderate right degenerative

1:51

temporomandibular joint disease.

1:53

There is some sort of subacute

1:56

left maxillary sinusitis.

1:58

You see a subacute appearing fluid level there.

2:01

And that's what this initial study showed.

2:04

That same year in 2020,

2:06

the patient then went on to have an FDG brain

2:08

PET CT. Here's the FDG brain PET CT.

2:12

And this showed statistically significant

2:14

hypometabolism in the bilateral temporal lobes

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as well as within the bilateral parietal lobes.

2:21

There was also a little bit of focal hypometabolism

2:24

in the left occipital lobe,

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corresponding to the location of that

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known old left occipital infarct.

2:30

The patient then had an MRI of

2:33

the brain three months later,

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also in 2020,

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but three months after the initial study.

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And we will take a look at that.

2:41

So here's the prior DWI, which was negative.

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And here is the DWI sequence from

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the study three months later.

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We now have an acute infarct in the Pica territory

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of the right cerebellar hemisphere.

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Shows up as light bulb hot on DWI.

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It's actually low in signal on ADC,

2:58

which tells us this is true.

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Restricted diffusion.

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So it is an acute infarct that likely happened

3:04

between less than seven days in age.

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There's also an equivocal additional punctate

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focus of DWI hyperintensity here in the

3:13

left cerebellar hemisphere as well.

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And then all the other findings were otherwise

3:17

stable since the study three months prior.

3:21

So this is again the 70-year-old with memory loss.

3:24

The initial MRI had showed moderate cerebral

3:28

atrophy with a temporal parietal predilection.

3:31

The MRI of the brain showed all these areas of old

3:34

infarcts. There were in the bilateral occipital,

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left parietal,

3:37

multiple old infarcts higher up in the

3:39

brain here on the left-hand side.

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The initial MRI was negative in the DWI sequence,

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but when the patient came back three months later,

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again we had the acute infarct in the right

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cerebellar hemisphere and another questionable

3:52

one in the left cerebellar hemisphere.

3:55

We also saw changes of cerebral amyloid

3:58

angiopathy and superficial sclerosis.

4:01

This is the FDG brain PET CT from 2020.

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And in addition to hypometabolism in the areas of

4:08

the old infarcts, which is what you would expect,

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we also had statistically significant hypometabolism

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in the bilateral parietal lobes,

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the bilateral temporal lobes as well as

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the left posterior cingulate gyrus.

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So you see here on the PET CT,

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this area blue is all statistically significant

4:25

cortical hypometabolism in the parietal

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and in the temporal lobe.

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This is the FDG brain PET CT here

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in a different color format.

4:32

This is the hypometabolism in the bilateral temporal

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lobes and bilateral parietal lobes.

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This is another look at this FDG brain PET

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CT in the coronal plane.

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So anteriorly,

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the frontal lobes look okay,

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but there's hypometabolism in the bilateral

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temporal lobes and posteriorly, again,

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we see it in the bilateral parietal lobes.

4:53

This is the PET MR.

4:55

Fusion on the same patient.

4:56

Hypometabolism in the bilateral temporal and parietal.

4:59

So this patient really had a mixture

5:02

of three different diagnoses.

5:04

They had vascular dementia

5:05

from all their infarcts.

5:07

They had Alzheimer's dementia as well

5:09

as cerebral amyloid angiopathy.

Report

Faculty

Suzie Bash, MD

Medical Director of Neuroradiology

San Fernando Valley Interventional Radiology & Imaging (SFI), RadNet

Tags

Vascular

Syndromes

PET

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Neuroradiology

Neuro

MRI

Idiopathic

CT

Brain

Acquired/Developmental

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