Interactive Transcript
0:00
This 75-year-old woman has proven
0:03
Steele Richardson-Olszewski syndrome,
0:06
also known as progressive supranuclear palsy.
0:09
This is another disorder that affects the
0:12
nigrostriatal dopaminergic system,
0:15
which has pathologic features
0:17
that include neuronal loss.
0:19
This patient does have cerebral
0:20
atrophy and astrocytosis,
0:24
but unlike corticobasal degeneration,
0:26
one of its lookalikes,
0:28
the cerebral cortical component,
0:30
occurs much later and is not as severe.
0:34
It is also considered a tauopathy with neuronal
0:37
accumulation of abnormal tau protein.
0:42
Tauopathies encompass a number of diseases,
0:45
including Alzheimer's disease.
0:48
Like many other neurodegenerative disorders,
0:51
there are argyrophilic silver staining aggregates
0:55
of abnormal tau in the brain
0:57
and throughout the brain.
0:59
Many of these affect the substantia nigra.
1:02
So, the substantia nigra is affected
1:05
as it is in Parkinson's disease,
1:06
although the loss of the zona compacta
1:09
hyperintense area is not affected,
1:12
or it's not affected early
1:14
or in the mid-stage of the disease.
1:16
The clinical features include symmetric akinesia,
1:20
which this patient had with rigidity,
1:22
difficulty walking that simulates classic
1:25
Parkinson's disease.
1:26
The abnormalities are most marked axially with
1:29
early disequilibrium and very frequent falls.
1:32
They have supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, dysarthria,
1:36
dysphasia, and because it's so midbrain centric,
1:39
the patients often die from aspiration pneumonia
1:42
at about six or seven years.
1:44
Progressive supranuclear palsy demonstrating
1:46
the hummingbird sign with some anatomy,
1:48
by the way.
1:49
There's your cerebellar vermis,
1:51
there's your primary fissure,
1:52
here's your posterolateral fissure.
1:54
And then as we come up,
1:55
the superior medullary velum,
1:57
the inferior caliculus,
1:58
the very atrophic superior caliculus,
2:01
the habenula posterior commissure,
2:03
then the straight sinus,
2:05
the region of the vein of galen and the internal
2:07
cerebral vein region.
2:08
Here's the massa intermedia.
2:10
There's the splenium, body, genu,
2:13
rostrum, and lamina terminalis of the corpus callosum.
2:17
Here is the midbrain,
2:18
the interpeduncular cistern
2:20
and the mammillary body.
2:22
All anatomic components well seen in the midline
2:25
due to the presence of atrophy
2:27
involving the midbrain in PSP.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.