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Joubert Syndrome

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This is an MRI of the brain in a two-year

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old child with developmental delay.

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So, as we're looking,

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the cerebral hemispheres look fairly normal.

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We have good myelination that is appropriate

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for a two-year-old child.

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The ventricular system is normal.

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We're not seeing any asymmetry.

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We're not seeing any other suspicious lesions.

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Now, if we get to the posterior fossa,

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there's something that stands out,

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and it can be tricky to catch if you're not paying

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attention because it's a midline finding,

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and it's, in particular, the absence of something.

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And I'm not seeing a cerebellar vermis right here.

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I'm seeing the right cerebellar hemisphere.

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I'm seeing the left cerebellar hemisphere.

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And in between,

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I'm not really seeing a cerebellar vermis.

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Now, if I go superiorly,

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maybe I see a small vermis.

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If I look on this sagittal image,

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all this is the cerebellum.

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Cerebellar hemispheres.

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This is the small cerebellar vermis.

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We can see the fourth ventricle.

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So there's a hypoplastic cerebellar vermis,

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but there's no cystic dilation

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of the posterior fossa.

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So, it's a hypoplastic cerebellar vermis

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that could easily be overlooked.

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But what else do we see?

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If we look,

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the superior cerebellar peduncles are parallel,

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bilaterally.

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They are parallel.

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Ad additionally, in this appearance,

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they're thickened right here.

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And this appearance here has been likened

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to that of a molar tooth,

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where here is the visible portion of the tooth,

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and these are the roots,

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that thickened roots that come down

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and end up being somewhat parallel.

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So, the classic molar tooth abnormality

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is an entity called Joubert syndrome,

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where there is a molar tooth abnormality in the

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setting of a hypoplastic cerebellar vermis.

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The molar tooth abnormality and the parallel

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thickened superior cerebellar peduncles is

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related to incomplete decussation of the fibers of

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the superior cerebellar peduncle in the midbrain.

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some diffusion tensor fiber tracking studies

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have shown that these patients sometimes also

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may not have a parameter decussation.

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So, what that means is their right side of the

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brain could be predominantly involved in

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motor for the right side of the body,

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which is different than the typical configuration.

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So this is a patient with a vermian hypoplasia,

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a molar tooth abnormality.

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And collectively,

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this is known as Joubert syndrome.

Report

Description

Faculty

Asim F Choudhri, MD

Chief, Pediatric Neuroradiology

Le Bonheur Children's Hospital

Tags

Pediatrics

Neuroradiology

MRI

Idiopathic

Congenital

Brain

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