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Training Collections
Library Memberships
On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Continuing Medical Education (State CME)
Complete all of your state CME requirements in one convenient place.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
Case of the Week (Free)
Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Case Crunch: Rapid Case Review (Free)
Register for free live board reviews.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
1 topic,
15 topics, 59 min.
Case: Assessing Lesion Position
4 m.Intra-Axial vs. Extra-Axial Lesions
3 m.Case: Typical Locations of Meningiomas
3 m.Case: Defining Meningioma
2 m.Case: Meningioma Appearance on MRI
6 m.Case: Meningioma Enhancement
3 m.Case: Meningioma vs. Schwannoma
5 m.Case: Meningiomas in the Posterior Fossa
5 m.Case: Planum Sphenoidale Meningioma with Orbital Apex Extension
4 m.Case: Suprasellar Meningioma
7 m.Case: Optic Nerve Meningioma
6 m.Case: Vascular Encasement of Meningioma With Absent Vasogenic Edema
3 m.Case: Parafalcine Meningioma
6 m.Case: Meningiomatosis
5 m.Case: Solitary Fibrous Tumor
6 m.9 topics, 38 min.
Case: Hemangioblastoma and Von Hippel-Lindau Syndrome
7 m.Case: Recurrent Hemangioblastoma
3 m.Case: Spinal Hemangioblastoma
4 m.Case: VHL Renal Lesions
6 m.Case: Endolymphatic Sac Tumor
3 m.Case: Central Neurocytoma
6 m.Case: Lhermitte-Duclos Disease/Dysplastic Cerebellar Gangliocytoma
6 m.Case: Epidermoid Cyst
4 m.Case: Rhabdomyosarcoma
4 m.10 topics, 44 min.
Introduction to Glioma Imaging
1 m.Introduction to the 2021 WHO CNS Tumor Classification
5 m.Neuroimaging Techniques For CNS Tumors
13 m.Pediatric Brain Tumors Based on Molecular Genetics: Medulloblastomas
2 m.Pediatric Brain Tumors Based on Molecular Genetics: Ependymomas
6 m.Pediatric Brain Tumors Based on Molecular Genetics: Diffuse Midline Gliomas
4 m.Adult Brain Tumors Based on Molecular Genetics: Solitary Fibrous Tumors and Hemangiopericytoma
2 m.Adult Brain Tumors Based on Molecular Genetics: Circumscribed Gliomas
2 m.Adult Brain Tumors Based on Molecular Genetics: Glioblastomas
3 m.Adult Brain Tumors Based on Molecular Genetics: Diffuse Gliomas
9 m.21 topics, 1 hr. 32 min.
IDH-Wildtype Gliomas
8 m.Case: Primary IDH-Wildtype Glioma
3 m.Case: IDH-Wildtype Glioma
6 m.Case: IDH-Wildtype Gliobastoma with Epedymal Extension
7 m.IDH-Mutant Gliomas
9 m.Case: IDH-Mutant Astrocytoma, FLAIR Mismatch, Grade 2
5 m.Case: IDH-Mutant Astrocytoma, Grade 2
3 m.Case: IDH-Mutant Oligodendroglioma, Grade 2
2 m.Case: Oligodendroglioma, Grade 3
3 m.Case: CNS Lymphoma
4 m.H3 and BRAF Gliomas
9 m.Case: H3K27M Midline Glioma, Grade 4
3 m.Case: H3K27 Glioma
3 m.Case: BRAF V600E Tumor
5 m.T2 FLAIR Mismatch Sign of IDH-Mutant Astrocytomas
8 m.Case: T2 FLAIR Mismatch Sign, Astrocytoma – 31 y/o Female
2 m.Case: T2 FLAIR Mismatch Sign, Astrocytoma – 28 y/o Male
1 m.Case: IDH Mutant Astrocytoma, No Mismatch Sign
2 m.Approach to Intra-Axial Tumors: Tumor Mimics, Non-Neoplastic Lesions
12 m.Final Pearls, Pediatric Non-Gliomas
5 m.Summary
2 m.17 topics, 26 min.
Case: Typical Medulloblastoma
2 m.Case: WNT-activated Medulloblastoma
1 m.Case: SHH-activated Medulloblastoma
2 m.Case: Ependymoma
2 m.Case: Posterior Fossa Ependymoma Type B
2 m.Case: Pilocytic Astrocytoma
2 m.Case: Solid Pilocytic Astrocytoma With No Discernible Cyctic Component
3 m.Case: Pilocytic Astrocytoma Within the Fourth Ventricle
2 m.Case: H3K27M Diffuse Midline Glioma With a DIPG Pattern, Grade 4
3 m.Case: Diffuse Midline Glioma With a DIPG Pattern
2 m.Case: Pilocytic Astrocytoma Masked as DIPG
2 m.Case: Embryonal Tumor With Multilayered Rosettes
2 m.Case: Diffuse Midline Glioma With a Bi-thalamic Pattern
2 m.Case: Pilocytic Astrocytoma Arising From the Thalamus
2 m.Case: Diffuse Astrocytoma
1 m.Case: Diffuse Astrocytoma With Apparent Discrete Margins
2 m.Case: Diffuse Astrocytoma With Gliomatosis Cerebri Pattern of Spread
2 m.0:00
I'm here with my colleague, Dr. Ben Laser,
0:03
and he has emphasized repeatedly the importance of
0:06
locating a mass, not just where it is in the brain,
0:10
upper, lower, supratentorial, infratentorial,
0:11
but most importantly,
0:13
what compartment is the lesion in?
0:15
Is it extra-axial or intra-axial?
0:18
So, let's have a look. We've got a mass.
0:21
This mass is extra-axial.
0:24
I've got some little dots here,
0:26
which represent the arachnoid capsules,
0:28
which is where meningiomas arise.
0:30
And we've got the extra-axial space with some CSF.
0:34
Now, this gray area is CSF,
0:36
but also the black area is CSF,
0:38
meant to delimit the CSF
0:40
with the folds of the dura in it.
0:42
So the dura is displaced,
0:44
and within those dural folds
0:46
are displaced CSF vessels.
0:48
So just for purposes of education,
0:51
if I was to say, "Well, water is blue,"
0:54
well, this is water too.
0:55
The black area as well.
0:57
I've just drawn it a little bit differently because
0:59
you've got some folds of dura in there also.
1:02
So, let's look at some of the signs that we would use
1:05
to isolate a mass as being extra-axial.
1:09
First, an extra-axial lesion
1:10
will push this gray cortex inward.
1:14
Never will the cortex go all the way around
1:16
the lesion circumferentially.
1:18
So this is known as the cortical
1:20
and white matter buckle sign.
1:23
Then we've also got expansion or widening
1:27
of the subarachnoid space.
1:29
This widening may make a thin slit between the lesion
1:33
and the brain parenchyma,
1:35
consisting of cerebrospinal fluid.
1:37
I'm going to put a little blue on there
1:39
just to emphasize that it's water.
1:40
And this is known as the hyperintense on
1:43
T2 or water-weighted imaging cleft sign.
1:47
With expansion of the subarachnoid space,
1:49
you'll also get a little meniscus of
1:51
water signal around the lesion,
1:53
and this is known as the meniscus sign.
1:56
Now, unlike a parenchymal lesion,
1:58
which may efface brain parenchyma,
2:00
an extra-axial lesion is not going to
2:03
interfere with brain parenchyma,
2:05
and you're going to have preservation
2:06
of brain boundaries.
2:08
And then finally,
2:09
the vessels in an extra-axial lesion
2:12
are going to be pushed in.
2:13
So, we've got several signs that all of you residents
2:16
and fellows, and young attendings
2:17
can use to decide that a lesion is extra-axial.
2:21
You've got the meniscus sign,
2:23
you've got the cleft sign,
2:25
you've got the displaced vessel sign,
2:28
and you've got the gray and white matter inward buckle
2:31
sign to tell you you've got an extra-axial lesion,
2:34
which denotes frequently that you have a meningioma.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
I'm here with my colleague, Dr. Ben Laser,
0:03
and he has emphasized repeatedly the importance of
0:06
locating a mass, not just where it is in the brain,
0:10
upper, lower, supratentorial, infratentorial,
0:11
but most importantly,
0:13
what compartment is the lesion in?
0:15
Is it extra-axial or intra-axial?
0:18
So, let's have a look. We've got a mass.
0:21
This mass is extra-axial.
0:24
I've got some little dots here,
0:26
which represent the arachnoid capsules,
0:28
which is where meningiomas arise.
0:30
And we've got the extra-axial space with some CSF.
0:34
Now, this gray area is CSF,
0:36
but also the black area is CSF,
0:38
meant to delimit the CSF
0:40
with the folds of the dura in it.
0:42
So the dura is displaced,
0:44
and within those dural folds
0:46
are displaced CSF vessels.
0:48
So just for purposes of education,
0:51
if I was to say, "Well, water is blue,"
0:54
well, this is water too.
0:55
The black area as well.
0:57
I've just drawn it a little bit differently because
0:59
you've got some folds of dura in there also.
1:02
So, let's look at some of the signs that we would use
1:05
to isolate a mass as being extra-axial.
1:09
First, an extra-axial lesion
1:10
will push this gray cortex inward.
1:14
Never will the cortex go all the way around
1:16
the lesion circumferentially.
1:18
So this is known as the cortical
1:20
and white matter buckle sign.
1:23
Then we've also got expansion or widening
1:27
of the subarachnoid space.
1:29
This widening may make a thin slit between the lesion
1:33
and the brain parenchyma,
1:35
consisting of cerebrospinal fluid.
1:37
I'm going to put a little blue on there
1:39
just to emphasize that it's water.
1:40
And this is known as the hyperintense on
1:43
T2 or water-weighted imaging cleft sign.
1:47
With expansion of the subarachnoid space,
1:49
you'll also get a little meniscus of
1:51
water signal around the lesion,
1:53
and this is known as the meniscus sign.
1:56
Now, unlike a parenchymal lesion,
1:58
which may efface brain parenchyma,
2:00
an extra-axial lesion is not going to
2:03
interfere with brain parenchyma,
2:05
and you're going to have preservation
2:06
of brain boundaries.
2:08
And then finally,
2:09
the vessels in an extra-axial lesion
2:12
are going to be pushed in.
2:13
So, we've got several signs that all of you residents
2:16
and fellows, and young attendings
2:17
can use to decide that a lesion is extra-axial.
2:21
You've got the meniscus sign,
2:23
you've got the cleft sign,
2:25
you've got the displaced vessel sign,
2:28
and you've got the gray and white matter inward buckle
2:31
sign to tell you you've got an extra-axial lesion,
2:34
which denotes frequently that you have a meningioma.
Report
Faculty
Stephen J Pomeranz, MD
Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online
ProScan Imaging
Tags
Oncologic Imaging
Neuroradiology
Neoplastic
MRI
Brain
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