Upcoming Events
Log In
Pricing
Free Trial

MR Spectroscopy in Huntington's Chorea

HIDE
PrevNext

0:00

This is a 62-year-old man who presents with

0:03

behavioral changes and has already progressed

0:05

to the chorea stage of Huntington's chorea.

0:08

This is not unlike a case you may have seen

0:10

in other vignettes.

0:12

But what is striking,

0:14

along with the history which is necessary

0:16

to make the diagnosis,

0:17

is there's quite a bit of Sylvian atrophy.

0:20

There is frontal atrophy.

0:22

There's not much parietal atrophy yet.

0:26

Look at the temporal horns.

0:28

They are normal. They're basically pristine.

0:31

There is no entorhinal cortex atrophy.

0:35

There is no choroidal fissure widening.

0:37

So, for someone to suggest an ALZ

0:39

or Alzheimer's-like disorder would be imprudent.

0:44

In addition,

0:45

the patient has no vascular disease to speak of.

0:48

So, you can't really come up with another good

0:51

explanation for the patient's symptoms.

0:53

And when you look at the caudate nuclei,

0:56

they're pretty hard to dissect out

0:58

as separate structures.

0:59

Let's try it in the corona projection,

1:01

even though it's just a standard T1.

1:03

I mean,

1:04

where is the gray matter signal of the caudate?

1:07

Right there.

1:08

It's very small.

1:09

The frontal horns are bowing out laterally.

1:12

So when you have this combination of findings,

1:14

paucity of anything else going on,

1:17

atrophy that spares the mesial temporal region

1:20

and these puffy wide ventricles

1:22

in somebody with that history,

1:23

you almost have to make the diagnosis.

1:25

Now, this person had an additional weird history.

1:28

A relative, a cousin had neuroacanthocytosis,

1:33

which is a chorea type illness associated with

1:36

acanthocytes of the red cells, neuropathy,

1:39

myopathy, epilepsy, CPK elevation,

1:43

self-mutilation, and an eating disorder.

1:45

But this is another one of the choreiform

1:48

disorders that may be confused with

1:50

classic Huntington's disease.

1:52

Now, in Huntington's disease,

1:53

although we don't have it here,

1:55

you may see some abnormalities on SPECT.

1:58

You may see an elevated lactate level in the

2:01

occipital lobes because the abnormality occurs

2:04

as a toxicity in the mitochondria.

2:07

So, it's no surprise that you might make lactate

2:09

down low,

2:10

low NAA in the basal ganglia.

2:13

That's due to the cell loss.

2:14

And NAA reflects cell neuron capacity or

2:19

cell neuron density.

2:21

The Creatine,

2:22

the low basal ganglia creatine that you see with

2:25

this disorder correlates with the number of CAG repeats.

2:29

So if the number of CAG repeats is 55,

2:31

which is usually pretty bad,

2:33

then you're going to have a low creatine baseline

2:36

marker on SPECT imaging and PET in this region.

2:39

And you may even see,

2:40

due to mitochondrial dysfunction and / or poisoning,

2:44

pyruvate in the cerebrospinal fluid at high field.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Vascular

Trauma

Syndromes

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Neuroradiology

Neoplastic

Metabolic

MRI

Infectious

Idiopathic

Iatrogenic

Drug related

Congenital

Brain

Acquired/Developmental

© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.

Contact UsTerms of UsePrivacy Policy