Interactive Transcript
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This is a patient in the 40s who developed
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a myelopathy. What we see is the T1-weighted, T2,
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and STIR images, showing cord expansion,
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as well as abnormal cord signal intensity.
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Based on these images alone,
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again, we would be in a differential
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diagnosis of longitudinally,
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extensive demyelination versus an infectious
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inflammatory etiology.
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And we would look towards the post-gadolinium
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enhanced scan to try to help us in excluding a
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neoplasm or for our differential diagnosis.
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On the post-gadolinium enhanced images,
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you see that there is contrast enhancement
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within the spinal cord
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extending into the thoracic region.
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However, what's different about this case from the other
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cases of demyelination or neoplasm is that there
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is enhancement on the surface of the
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spinal cord, which is relatively dramatic.
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This bright signal intensity does not represent
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the fat. It's fat down here,
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but up here at the C6-7 level,
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it's contrast enhancement on the
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surface of the spinal cord.
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Typically, we do fat-suppressed post-gadolinium enhanced
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pulse sequences to eliminate the possibility
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that epidural fat would simulate
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contrast enhancement.
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Let's look at the post-gadolinium axial images.
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So as we proceed downward,
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we see the area of contrast enhancement in the
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thecal sac, which is different than that
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of the epidural fat. Let me point that out.
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Posteriorly, here is the epidural fat.
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However, on the post-gadolinium enhanced scans,
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you see here something on the surface,
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the posterior surface of the spinal cord,
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which is gadolinium enhancement.
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Let's look at a few other sections
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to see whether you can see that.
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So at this level,
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we now see enhancement both within the spinal
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cord, as well as on the surface of the spinal
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cord with a minimal amount of epidural fat.
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Cord.
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Surface of cord.
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Epidural fat.
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Posterior column enhancement, as well as
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surface of the spinal cord.
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I'm going to blow this up just a little bit more.
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So I'm looking at is on the surface of the
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spinal cord. That would be decidedly uncommon in
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a tumor and also would be uncommon
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in most infections. In this case,
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the etiology is a lesion which affects the peel
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surface of the spinal cord and then
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infiltrates into the spinal cord.
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And this is fairly characteristic of
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sarcoidosis. So just as in the brain,
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where we see it extending into the PIA,
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and then from there you get edema and secondary
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cortical involvement with sarcoidosis.
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So too,
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is sarcoidosis found on the surface of the spinal cord,
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then growing into the spinal cord from the PIAL surface.
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Here, we have a lesion which is entirely intramedullary
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where we don't see that PIAL involvement,
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which is just to point out that, occasionally,
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sarcoidosis will affect the cord primarily.
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Most of the time it's a meningeal process.
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Let me see whether there are any more
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axial scans that point this out.
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So here we have
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axial scans through the intramedullary
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portion of the sarcoidosis disease.
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But the presence of that superficial enhancement
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is useful in suggesting sarcoidosis differential
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diagnosis would include subarachnoid seeding
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of neoplasm such as medulloblastoma.
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But that's less likely to infiltrate the
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cord secondarily than sarcoidosis.
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