Interactive Transcript
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Hello, welcome back to ProScan MRI Online.
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We are going to continue our discussion
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on non-glial CNS brain tumors.
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This patient is a 33-year-old man who presents with headaches.
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On the far left sequence is our sagittal T1
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weighted sequence, and we can see a relatively
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well-defined superior cerebellar mass
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with a striated appearance.
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The T1 signal is typically
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hypointense with striations.
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The T2-weighted signal is usually increased with
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these septate or striations throughout the lesion.
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And on the far right panel,
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which is our T1 post-contrast sequence, lesions
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typically have variable enhancement,
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usually do not enhance in my experience but can have
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increased vascularity in the molecular layer or the
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leptomeninges usually due to venous
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engorge or venous enhancement.
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These characteristics are most consistent with Lhermitte-Duclos disease or dysplastic cerebellar ganglioma.
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These tumors usually show increased cerebral blood flow
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and volume on perfusion-weighted imaging on spectroscopy,
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there's usually decreased NAA choline myo
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and can have a variable lactate peak.
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These lesions also demonstrate increased
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FDG uptake on PET imaging. So,
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Lhermitte-Duclos disease or dysplastic cerebellar ganglioma as
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we've described a relatively well-defined cerebellar
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masses with a striated or corduroy or thyrogyral form
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pattern which has thickened cerebellar folia and
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are usually infiltrative but are well demarcated.
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They are classified as a grade one tumor.
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They are always in the cerebellum,
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usually unilateral and sometimes involve the vermis,
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rarely involving the brain stem.
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They are considered a benign cerebellar lesion but it
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is unclear if it is neoplastic
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malformation or hamartoma.
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The non-proliferation or absence of malignant
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transformation favors a hamartomatous nature of the lesion
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associated abnormalities include multiple
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hamartoma syndrome or Cowden Syndrome.
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These lesions can occur most commonly between
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the ages of 20-40 years of age.
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There is no gender predilection and these lesions
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typically do not grow or grow only very slowly.
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If mass effect is not relieved,
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prognosis is extremely poor as these lesions.
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As you can see on this far-left sequence,
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there is some cerebellar tonsil herniation and these lesions
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can obstruct the fourth ventricle leading to obstructive
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hydrocephalus and herniation. So, in terms of treatment,
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this lesion can be surgically resected
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if the patient is symptomatic,
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typically consisting of debulking and shunting due to
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the possibility of hydrocephalus
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or obstructive hydrocephalus.
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Surgical resection can be difficult as you
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can see on the T2-weighted sequence.
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As this lesion bleeds into the adjacent parenchyma
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and the margins can be difficult to resect.
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Most common signs and symptoms for this lesion include
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headache, nausea, vomiting, papilledema, unsteady gait,
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upper limb dysmetria,
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blurred vision and lower cranial nerve palsies.
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Other signs could include sensory-motor deficits,
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vertigo and patients can even present in a coma
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given the mass effect upon adjacent structures.
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Lhermitte-Duclos disease has a very characteristic appearance
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and usually very little differential exists. However,
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in a certain setting of sepsis or
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acute clinical deterioration,
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differential considerations could include
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subacute cerebellar infarction. However,
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there'd be more mass effect,
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it'd be increased diffusion signal
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in a vascular territory.
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Cerebellar vasculitis would have an acute onset of
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symptoms but would have similar findings of surrounding
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vasogenic edema and mass effect and not a
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confined tumor. As we have in this case,
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associated syndromes with Lhermitte-Duclos disease or
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dysplastic cerebellar ganglioma include multiple
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hamartoma syndrome and Cowden Syndrome.
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Multiple hamartoma syndrome is an autosomal dominant
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disorder. Typically a mutation in the PTEN gene.
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Patients with these disorders develop hamartoma
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neoplasms of the skin 90 to 100% of the time mucosa GI
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tract bones, CNS, eyes, and the genital urinary tract.
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They are associated with an increased risk of malignancy.
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Cowden disease also has an increased risk
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of other neoplasms such as breast cancer,
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endometrial cancer, and thyroid cancer.
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If the patient is diagnosed with Lhermitte-Duclos disease,
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as in this case,
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then you must screen for multiple Hamartoma syndrome.
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If the patient is diagnosed with multiple Hamartoma
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syndrome, then you must screen for Lhermitte-Duclos disease.
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The long-term cancer screening is needed, especially for
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thyroid and breast cancer, as the increased risk of
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malignancy is increased in these syndromes
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and associations. In conclusion,
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this is a supercellular mass with your
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characteristic T2 hyperintense lesion with striations
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giving the corduroy or gyroid form pattern appearance
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consistent with Lhermitte-Duclos disease or
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dysplastic cerebellar ganglioma.
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