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Mild Chiari I Malformation

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This is a head CT on a four-year-old boy

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with a headache.

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The head CT, at first glance,

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looks fairly normal.

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We're looking through it.

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We're not seeing any sign of hydrocephalus,

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any mass, or anything like that.

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But as we go down lower,

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we can see at the level of the foramen magnum,

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there's fullness,

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there's soft tissue-like material

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posterior to the brain stem.

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With modern CT scans,

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we have the ability to have

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multiplanar reformats.

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And this sagittal reformat shows us cerebellar

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tonsils protrude caudal to the level

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of the foramen magnum.

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This can be approximated on CT,

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but the best characterization for this is on MR.

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MR, if we zoom in,

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allows us to see several landmarks.

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There is the basion,

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which is the inferior aspect of the clivus,

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in particular,

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the basioccipital portion of the clivus.

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And then we have the opisthion.

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The basion and opisthion represent the anterior

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and posterior margins of the foramen magnum.

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We can use that to draw a line

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between the basion and the opisthion to

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approximate the plane of the foramen magnum.

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And then, we can make a measurement perpendicular

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to that line to see how far caudal to that

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plane the cerebellar tonsils extend.

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And here, they extend approximately nine and a

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half millimeters below the plane

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of the foramen magnum.

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And that is typically considered to

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be a Chiari Type I malformation.

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But how do we determine how significant this is?

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Well, the extent of tonsillar descent

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is one mechanism,

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but another tool we have is CSF flow studies.

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This is a dynamically acquired cardiac

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gated phase-contrast image.

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This is acquired sagittally at the

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level of the foramen magnum.

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We can see the basic anatomic details

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that we see in the structural image.

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And as we

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scroll through the cine,

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we can see different phases of CSF pulsations.

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And we can see here the brainstem,

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the upper cervical cord.

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And so this is the cervical medullary junction.

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And we can see that ventral to the brainstem

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and cervical medullary junction,

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we have patent bi-directional flow

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of cerebrospinal fluid.

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We can see it going from dark

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to bright.

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So that is showing two different

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directions of flow.

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We're also seeing flow posterior to the brainstem

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at the level of the foramen magnum.

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So this is a sign that,

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at the time the study is performed,

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there's not a significant alteration

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in CSF flow dynamics

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at the level the foramen magnum.

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Now,

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one of the other things that's a part of a

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Chiari Type I malformation imaging workup

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is imaging of the cervical spine.

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And we can see here the cerebellar tonsillar

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ectopia extending below the plane

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of the foramen magnum.

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And what we see of the cervical

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cord looks normal.

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We do not see any signs of a fluid collection

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within, either hydromyelia or syringohydromyelia.

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So, this case is an example

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of a mild Chiari Type I malformation

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without appreciable

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alteration in CSF flow dynamics

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and without evidence of syringohydromyelia.

Report

Description

Faculty

Asim F Choudhri, MD

Chief, Pediatric Neuroradiology

Le Bonheur Children's Hospital

Tags

Spine

Pediatrics

Neuroradiology

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Idiopathic

Congenital

Brain

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