Interactive Transcript
0:00
This is an MRI scan of the brain in a one-year-old
0:03
child with seizures and developmental delay.
0:05
One of the first things that
0:07
we see is this diffuse,
0:08
bright signal on T2-weighted imaging in the
0:11
deep juxtacortical and juxtaventricular white
0:14
matter of both cerebral hemispheres.
0:15
We see it in the frontal lobes.
0:17
It's a little bit patchy, slightly asymmetric.
0:19
We see it in the temporal lobes,
0:21
occipital lobes, parietal lobes.
0:23
Within that,
0:24
we see in the temporal poles,
0:27
we see a cystic change here on the left
0:29
and suggestion of a smaller cystic
0:31
change here on the right.
0:33
The lateral ventricles are larger than
0:35
typically expected for this age,
0:37
and this is likely related to ex vacuo enlargement
0:41
from decreased volume of the cerebral white matter.
0:43
So all of these are signs of diffuse bilateral
0:46
white matter injury
0:47
and decreased white matter volume.
0:49
In addition to that white matter injury,
0:51
we're seeing an abnormal sulcation pattern.
0:54
We're seeing shallow, narrowly spaced gyri.
0:58
This is polymicrogyria.
1:00
Now, it's a little more challenging to see in
1:03
this case where there's, first of all,
1:06
demyelination in a one-year-old is not
1:09
as much as it was in the other cases.
1:11
Secondly, there's diffuse white matter injury.
1:14
So that makes seeing the polymicrogyria
1:16
a little bit more challenging.
1:17
But if we use all the images
1:19
we have available to us,
1:20
we can see here on this sagittal T1-weighted image
1:25
along the inferior aspect of the inferior frontal gyrus,
1:29
we can see some narrowly spaced gyri.
1:31
This is polymicrogyria.
1:33
Then, one additional thing that we see
1:36
in addition to the polymicrogyria
1:37
and diffuse white matter injury,
1:39
white matter volume loss
1:40
and temporal poles cystic changes,
1:42
is on the susceptibility-weighted image,
1:45
we're seeing areas of susceptibility
1:46
hypointensity in the periventricular white matter
1:50
here in the right inferior parietal lobe,
1:53
and here in the left occipital lobe.
1:58
These are likely related to dystrophic mineralization.
2:02
Collectively,
2:03
these findings are very suggestive of
2:06
in utero cytomegalovirus infection.
2:09
One of the other clinical presentations of
2:11
children with in utero cytomegalovirus infection
2:16
is congenital sensorineural hearing loss.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.