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Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
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Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
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Musculoskeletal Imaging
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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.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
34 topics, 1 hr. 48 min.
Extradural Spine Lesions
7 m.Degenerative Spondylomyelopathy
3 m.Traumatic Lesions of the Spine
6 m.Subdural Hematoma of the Spine
2 m.Epidural Hematoma of the Spine
2 m.Post-operative Hematoma
4 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis of the Spine
5 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis with Epidural Phlegmon/Abscess
4 m.Tuberculous Spondylitis
5 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis with Prevertebral Abscess
2 m.Discitis Osteomyelitis with Anterior Epidural Phlegmon
3 m.Epidural Abscess from Facet Joint Infectious Synovitis
4 m.Paraspinal Abscess with Epidural Extension
3 m.Summary of Extradural Neoplasms
4 m.Lumbar Spine Schwannoma Extending into the Neural Foramen
2 m.Primary Osseous Extradural Neoplasms
8 m.Osteochondroma of the Spine
3 m.Extradural Metastatic Disease
4 m.Chondrosarcoma of the Spine
4 m.Metastatic Disease vs. Multiple Myeloma
3 m.Malignant versus Benign Compression Fractures
7 m.Extramedullary Hematopoiesis of the Epidural Space
3 m.Paraspinal Extramedullary Hematopoiesis
2 m.Multifocal Epidural Extramedullary Hematopoiesis
4 m.Epidural Lipomatosis
3 m.Extradural Congenital Lesions
6 m.Epidermoid Cyst of the Thoracic Spine
3 m.Spinal Congenital Anomalies: Myelomeningoceles
6 m.Cervicothoracic Myelomeningocele
3 m.Recurrent Myelomeningocele and Cord Tethering After Repair
2 m.Diastematomyelia
3 m.Diastematomyelia
3 m.Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy
3 m.Extradural Processes – Conclusion
3 m.0:01
I'd like to show a few cases of disease in the epidural
0:04
space which is unassociated with the vertebral bodies and
0:10
yet still is likely to cause compression of the spinal cord.
0:14
And I'm going to show a series of cases here.
0:17
This is a patient who has these low signal intensity areas
0:21
in the epidural fat, compressing the spinal cord anteriorly.
0:25
We notice that these low signal intensity areas on
0:28
T2-weighted scanning are the same signal intensity
0:31
as the bone marrow. This is an additional case.
0:35
This patient has had a post myelogram CT performed, and we see
0:42
that there is soft tissue in the posterior epidural space,
0:47
which is compressing the thecal sac anteriorly.
0:50
We notice that the bones don't look particularly good here,
0:53
this sort of osteopenic anemic-looking bones.
0:57
And even in the lumbar region,
0:59
we do have areas of abnormal signal intensity in the
1:03
anterior epidural space associated with the sacrum.
1:07
Both of these cases were patients who had
1:10
extramedullary hematopoiesis, that is,
1:12
red marrow cells effectively in the epidural space,
1:16
which can lead to compression of the spinal cord.
1:19
We see that this is epidural on the axial CT
1:22
scan, post myelogram, the cord, the thecal sac,
1:26
and then in the epidural space, the soft tissue.
1:29
Here is another case of extramedullary hematopoiesis.
1:33
In this case, we see that there is high signal intensity
1:37
on post-contrast imaging in the soft tissue on either side of
1:42
the spinal cord in the epidural space,
1:44
and that also is typical of active marrow in the epidural space.
1:50
And this has led to compression of the thecal sac in a
1:54
polygonal pattern that has been described as
1:58
a sign of extramedullary hematopoiesis.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
I'd like to show a few cases of disease in the epidural
0:04
space which is unassociated with the vertebral bodies and
0:10
yet still is likely to cause compression of the spinal cord.
0:14
And I'm going to show a series of cases here.
0:17
This is a patient who has these low signal intensity areas
0:21
in the epidural fat, compressing the spinal cord anteriorly.
0:25
We notice that these low signal intensity areas on
0:28
T2-weighted scanning are the same signal intensity
0:31
as the bone marrow. This is an additional case.
0:35
This patient has had a post myelogram CT performed, and we see
0:42
that there is soft tissue in the posterior epidural space,
0:47
which is compressing the thecal sac anteriorly.
0:50
We notice that the bones don't look particularly good here,
0:53
this sort of osteopenic anemic-looking bones.
0:57
And even in the lumbar region,
0:59
we do have areas of abnormal signal intensity in the
1:03
anterior epidural space associated with the sacrum.
1:07
Both of these cases were patients who had
1:10
extramedullary hematopoiesis, that is,
1:12
red marrow cells effectively in the epidural space,
1:16
which can lead to compression of the spinal cord.
1:19
We see that this is epidural on the axial CT
1:22
scan, post myelogram, the cord, the thecal sac,
1:26
and then in the epidural space, the soft tissue.
1:29
Here is another case of extramedullary hematopoiesis.
1:33
In this case, we see that there is high signal intensity
1:37
on post-contrast imaging in the soft tissue on either side of
1:42
the spinal cord in the epidural space,
1:44
and that also is typical of active marrow in the epidural space.
1:50
And this has led to compression of the thecal sac in a
1:54
polygonal pattern that has been described as
1:58
a sign of extramedullary hematopoiesis.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Spine
Neuroradiology
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
Metabolic
MRI
CT
Acquired/Developmental
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