Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Laser,
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this is a 64-year-old woman with severe dementia
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over the course of a year.
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I have before you an axial B-value,
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about a thousand diffusion image.
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Can you summarize the imaging findings on
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diffusion before I talk about the clinical
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manifestations and subtypes of CJD?
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Sure.
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So the first thing that you note when you look at
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this image is symmetric involvement of the deep
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gray nuclei, predominantly the caudate head,
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the putamen and the thalamus.
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Here you have a nice involvement of the medial
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aspect of the thalamus and the pulvinar.
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This would be your typical hockey stick sign.
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When you scroll up to the cortex,
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you'll notice some cortical involvement.
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You'll see this nice cortical ribbon sign.
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It just traces the gyri.
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And as you scroll down the symmetric involvement,
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essentially, all the deep midbrain structures,
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one of the things that you can look for is that
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this diffusion restriction actually persists
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for two weeks. It's longer than an infarct.
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There's no volume loss. There's no mass effect.
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And this diffusion restriction stays
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within the deep gray nuclei.
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Yeah. And it may stay there for like,
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a year if the patient lives that long.
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So it doesn't evolve over the course of a
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week or two like a typical infarct does.
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Although, it's very infarct looking because
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of the cortical involvement.
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There's even involvement back here
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in the parietal occipital region.
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And sometimes,
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if you get bilateral or bitemporal involvement,
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it may simulate limbic encephalitis that occurs in
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oat cell carcinoma of the lung and various
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other paraneoplastic syndromes.
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This patient doesn't have limbic
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system involvement.
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So, let's talk a little bit about CJD and various
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prion-mediated disorders.
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CJD is the classic one.
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The only other one that humans get is
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transmissible mink encephalopathy.
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Now, most cases of CJD occur
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as a result of a sporadic mutation.
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In fact, it's 85% of CJD.
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A familial gene mutation. In other words,
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heredofamilial CJD, only 10%.
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There are genetic causes.
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You don't have to eat meat to get this
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disorder in an acquired form.
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You can get it from corneal transplant,
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from tainted human growth hormone,
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derived transplants.
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But getting it from a blood transfusion
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is extremely rare.
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The CJD variant,
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which is the consumption type,
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usually occurs in younger individuals,
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average age about 28
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versus the typical CJD in age 68.
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The variant, they live about 14 months,
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versus the typical one,
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they live about four months.
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And if you look pathologically,
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they have necrosis in the brain with something
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called florid daisy plaques.
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Now, let's talk a little bit about
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what you see macroscopically.
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You'll actually see a spongy brain.
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You'll see actual macroscopic and
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microscopic holes in the brain.
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Another name given to this disorder is known
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as fatal familial insomnia syndrome.
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And there is some debate
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about what the particle consists of.
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It's a proteinaceous particle.
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Some have deemed it to be infectious,
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although that's somewhat in debate.
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This particle has no RNA, no DNA,
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and it's extremely difficult to kill.
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It's got very long incubation times,
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as much as 40 years.
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And when I say difficult to kill,
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normal sterilization doesn't eradicate the prion.
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You actually need chlorine bleach to do that.
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So that's a little bit scary.
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So, in summary, classic CJD.
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Mean age, about 68,
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sporadic, shorter duration,
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usually not heredo-familial.
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Dementia, pulvinar or hockey stick sign
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may be present.
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Variable amounts of protease-resistant prion protein,
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or PrPres,
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are present.
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In variant CJD,
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younger,
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mean age, 28.
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You can get this from contaminated food.
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Longer duration of time,
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usually slower progression to death
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than the classic variety.
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Behavioral changes are common.
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The pulvinar sign is seen in the overwhelming
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majority of patients along with the
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hockey stick sign, over 75%.
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So more common in variant CJD
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and large amounts of protease-resistant
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prion protein, PrPres.
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Let's move on, shall we?
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Okay. P and Laser out.
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