Interactive Transcript
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I'm going to use this case to transition to
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traumatic injuries of the spinal cord, as well as
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vascular injuries to the spinal cord.
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On T1-weighted imaging of this young patient who had
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pain after a fall while landscaping,
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you see bright signal intensity on T1-weighted imaging.
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This is in the mid to lower thoracic region.
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The spinal cord at that level is not
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particularly expanded. However,
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we see other areas on the T2 and STIR imaging
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of hemorrhage within the spinal cord.
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I have to admit that this was performed
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about a week after the patient's initial presentation.
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And so, some of the cord enlargement that you
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would expect with hemorrhage in the spinal cord
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has resolved.
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When you have hemorrhage in the spinal cord,
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there is a differential diagnosis.
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Obviously, with the clinical history of
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a fall while landscaping,
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you'd suggest that this was a post traumatic
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injury to the spinal cord.
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However, we know that ependymomas have that
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predilection for a little hemosiderin cap within the tumor.
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Demyelinating disorders, unlikely.
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Infectious etiology,
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sometimes toxoplasmosis may show some hemorrhage.
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So that's in a differential diagnosis.
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And then we have our vascularities that may
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occur and injure the spinal cord with either a
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cord stroke or a cord hemorrhagic infarction.
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In point of fact,
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this patient ended up having two possible
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etiologies, or three, I should say.
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There was the traumatic event while landscaping.
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However, this patient also carried a diagnosis
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of Kawasaki's disease,
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which is an obliterative vasculitis.
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Which could cause a hemorrhagic injury to the
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spinal cord that's not associated with cord
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enlargement at the one to two week mark,
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but in point of fact, would lead to cord myelomalacia.
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His CSF, however, was positive for herpes.
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So we also have the possibility of an infectious
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etiology that might be hemorrhagic.
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Herpes, a little bit unusual,
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certainly for herpes simplex
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or those other herpetic viruses, varicella.
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However, with herpes zoster, there is a possibility that this
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could have been hemorrhagic.
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So this patient ended up being discharged with
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a final diagnosis of Kawasaki's disease
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with herpetic myelitis
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in the setting of a traumatic event.
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This will be our transition to discussing
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traumatic injuries to the spinal cord, as well
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as vascular injuries to the spinal cord.
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