Interactive Transcript
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This is an MRI of the brain in a one-week-old
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child that had an in utero abnormality
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that wanted to be further characterized.
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One of the first things we see is this very,
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very featureless surface sulcation
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pattern to the brain.
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We're seeing a rudimentary Sylvian
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fissure on both sides.
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At most,
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it looks sort of like a large figure eight,
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but we're not seeing any other major sulci.
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Within that,
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we're seeing enlargement of
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both lateral ventricles,
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more pronounced posteriorly.
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On the brain,
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we're actually seeing something that we saw on
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the other cases.
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We saw the peripheral cortex.
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We see a cell sparse zone that's bright
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on T2-weighted imaging.
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And then, we see what is a band of gray matter
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like substance called gray matter heterotopia.
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So, this is a very severe case of lissencephaly
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with band-type heterotopia.
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At this point,
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instead of just lissencephaly,
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which means smooth brain,
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it can also be referred to as agyria because
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there's essentially no gyri.
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The coronal image here also shows.
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You can see the temporal lobe
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is just one single curve on the periphery,
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with no surface undulations.
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We see that subtle curvature for this concavity,
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for the Sylvian fissure,
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and we're not seeing any sulcation
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whatsoever in the frontal lobes.
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This is a fairly severe appearance.
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The patient beforehand had a head ultrasound
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which also showed a very featureless
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temporal lobe,
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very featureless parasagittal cortex here
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in the frontal lobes.
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The one thing to be aware of, though,
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is to be careful on ultrasound,
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especially to not overcall lissencephaly
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in the setting of severe prematurity.
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The sulcation pattern that looks
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abnormal in a term infant
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could be normal at 32 weeks or 28 weeks.
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So in a premature infant,
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where some of the brain development
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has not yet taken place,
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we have to be careful not to overcall lissencephaly.
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That said,
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this severe abnormality is definitely
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a true lissencephaly.
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The MRI confirms the cell sparse zone
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and the band-type heterotopia.
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So this is a severe case of lissencephaly with
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band-type heterotopia with an agyric pattern.
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