Interactive Transcript
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This is a 42-year-old woman with
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tremors and poor wound healing.
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We've got an axial T2 on the left,
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a flair in the middle,
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and a coronal T1 on the far right.
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Let's scroll.
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We've got some pretty nice anatomy here,
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including the delimitation
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between the globus pallidus,
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the internal and external portions,
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and the putamen.
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Got a nice view of the caudate nucleus here anteriorly,
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the thalamus and the pulvinar.
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There's the external capsule,
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the claustrum and the extreme capsule.
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Now, we're talking about tremor.
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And one of the first things that might pop into
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your head, first things that pops in,
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is Parkinson's disease.
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But look at the clarity of the
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red nucleus on multiple cuts,
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certainly on this cut,
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between the nucleus ruber or red nucleus,
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and the substantia nigra.
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Look at the preservation of the lateral aspect of
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the substantia nigra or preservation of the tail
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of the swallow, in this case, laterally.
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So, this is one where you could say the findings
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are inconsistent with Parkinson's disease
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in a tremor patient.
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Now, as you continue scrolling,
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you see that for her age,
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she should have only maybe four or five gliotic foci.
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She's got more than that.
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So, odds are there is a vasculopathic insult
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at the microscopic level that's ongoing.
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But what's even more strange than
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that is as we get down low,
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there are these mesial temporal areas
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of hypointensity that represent hyalinization or
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hardening of the mesiotemporal region.
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And these can go on to calcify on CT.
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This has a very characteristic appearance of
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this disease known as lipoid proteinosis,
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also known as Erbach-Wheatley disease.
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I'm showing it as a nice comparison in somebody
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that has tremor that does not demonstrate the iron
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distribution signs of Parkinson's disease.
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Now,
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this disorder is associated with dry wrinkly skin
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and papules, and beating around the eyelids.
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Mesial temporal brain hardening that is bilateral
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and symmetric is one of the cardinal signs,
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although you may also see basal ganglia
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and thalamic hypointensities.
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It's inherited as an autosomal recessive
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on chromosome 1q21,
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and it's caused by buildup of hyalin material.
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On the coronal T1, circled nicely in green are
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these areas of hyalinization of the mesial
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temporal region in a patient with lipoid
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proteinosis who presents with tremor.
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