Interactive Transcript
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This is a 67-year-old man who presents with
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abnormal fine motor skills and a strong family
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history, namely that of Huntington's chorea.
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I think you're all first struck on this T1 FLAIR,
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also a T1 with contrast,
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a T1 spin echo on your left,
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by the atrophy,
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especially in the Sylvian region,
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but throughout the brain, it's generalized atrophy.
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What you should also be struck by is the fact that
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even though there's generalized atrophy,
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there's not much atrophy in the entorhinal cortex,
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which is right here.
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Yes, the temporal horns are a little bit generous,
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the choroidal fissures are a little bit generous,
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but compared with the atrophy elsewhere,
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they're much less conspicuously present,
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than when you know the history,
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which makes it a lot easier.
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But without the history,
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you always want to be looking at the size
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of the corpus striatal structures.
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And in prior vignettes,
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you have seen the caudate nucleus.
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Look how small the caudate nucleus is,
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especially look at the lack of width from medial to lateral.
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And with that lack of width,
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the frontal horns bow out laterally because
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there's no structure there to restrain them.
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Look at the lack of substantive meat structure
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or width to the region of the putamen,
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which is right here.
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Should be a nice curvilinear lentiform structure.
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If I draw over, it looks a little bit like this.
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I'm going to draw the triangle right here and
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in that triangle is the globus pallidus.
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I'll make that a different color.
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And then look at what's left for the putamen.
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Not much at all.
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You can kind of hallucinate these same
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structures on the opposite side.
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So there's thinning or thinness of the putamen.
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There's certainly mediolateral thinning
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of the caudate nucleus.
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Now, let's pull down some axials and see if
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we can corroborate original thought.
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I've got an axial T2 fast spin echo,
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an axial STIR,
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and an axial T1-weighted image.
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Probably the T1 is the least useful of the three.
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Let's focus on these two right here.
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We see a little bit of brain
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iron in the GPi and GPe,
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the internal and external aspect of the globus pallidus,
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which blends with the retro lentiform
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portion of the internal capsule.
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There is the putamen looking relatively
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small on both sides on the FLAIR.
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But look at how tiny the caudate nucleus is.
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Then as we come up to the frontal horns,
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you can hardly even see a caudate nucleus next to
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the frontal horns and the frontal
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horns are bowing laterally.
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Later on we'll talk about the intercaudate distance
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ratios, the frontal horn distance, and so on.
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But the take-home message here is you
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have a generalized pattern of
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atrophy that even involves the cerebellum,
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although not as much.
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But there is lesser degrees of involvement in the
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inferior aspect of the brain in the region
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known as the entorhinal cortex.
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And I'll show it to you one more
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time on the FLAIR image.
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Here is your entorhinal cortex which consists of
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about six or seven other structures that we'll
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delve into later on.
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So the temporal horns,
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not as big as you would expect.
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The choroidal fissures,
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not as big as you would expect in somebody with
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Alzheimer's disease, and the history isn't
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quite so good for that.
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Namely,
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the patient's primary symptoms are related to a
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movement disorder and a genetic disorder
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and that is Huntington's disease.
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Now, Huntington's disease results in a neurophysiologic
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imbalance that causes chorea.
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There are many different causes of chorea,
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diverse causes.
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Infections, I've seen HIV cause it.
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I've seen rubella cause it.
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The classic cause is endocarditis.
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It can be caused by trauma, by autoimmune disease.
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The classic is primary intracranial
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leukocytoclastic vasculitis or systemic lupus
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erythematosus, genetic mutations or
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neurodegenerative diseases like Huntington's chorea,
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stroke, tumors, drug exposure.
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The typical drug is the one used to treat the
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tremor of Parkinson's disease and several
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metabolic disorders of which actually, in a way,
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Huntington's chorea is a metabolic disorder,
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at least in the end game,
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as a result of the genetic
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abnormalities and abnormality of metabolism results.
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Let's move on and talk more about
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Huntington's disease.
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