Interactive Transcript
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Let's take a look at a 75-year-old woman whose
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chief complaint is gait disturbance.
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A secondary complaint is blurred
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vision and gaze disturbance.
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I have for you a magnified sagittal T1-weighted image.
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Right about the midline,
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there's the aqueduct of Sylvius.
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I have an axial T2 spin echo, fast spin echo,
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and an axial FLAIR,
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which is more white matter-sensitive.
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But I'm not particularly interested so much in the
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white matter with gliosis and encephalomalacia
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and cerebral atrophy,
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which is present as I am in the brainstem.
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Now, the first thing I'd like to point out in this
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patient that has a gait disturbance,
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so has a movement abnormality,
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is that the compacta stripe,
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the hyperintense compacta stripe,
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which separates the iron in the substantia nigra
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and the red nucleus, is preserved.
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That is not the case when you have moderate to
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later-stage classic Parkinson's disease.
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Another key observation is the fullness
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of the inferior colliculus,
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but the atrophy of the superior
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colliculus and the midbrain,
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such that the upper portion of the midbrain comes
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to a point and the mammillary body
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appears conspicuous.
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Above the superior colliculus sits the
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habenula and posterior commissure.
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But look at how small the superior colliculus is.
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It should be about as big as
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the inferior colliculus.
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So, it should make kind of two waves in a row,
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one here and then another one here.
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But our second bump appears lost.
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And then if I use my artistic skills,
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which used to be pretty good but no more,
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you can kind of see the snout of a hummingbird.
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If I put a little eyeball on it,
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there's the hummingbird,
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there's the snout of the hummingbird,
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and that's because the midbrain is atrophic
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and the rest of it looks pointed.
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And this hummingbird sign is a sign
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of progressive supranuclear palsy,
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also known as Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome.
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Now, there are some other signs of PSP,
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which is considered one of the Parkinson plus syndromes.
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Now, when I say plus,
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I'm not talking about large-size clothing.
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I'm talking about perhaps a misnomer of a group of
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diseases that have Parkinson's-like symptoms,
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and this includes progressive supranuclear palsy,
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corticobasal degeneration with lots of cortical involvement,
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Lewy Body dementia,
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frontotemporal dementia,
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formerly known as Pick's disease,
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and multisystem atrophy.
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There are some others that have been lumped in there,
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but those are the five main ones.
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I tend to stay away from that designation because
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I find it a little bit confusing.
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But now back to the signs.
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If we draw a line through the back
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of the aqueduct of Sylvius,
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which I'll do right here.
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And then we draw an oblique line to this notch
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at the level of the cerebral peduncle,
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where the tectum and tegmentum have a transition.
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You should see a little bit of tissue protruding
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outside that line, and you see just a wisp of it.
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I'm going to go to another slice, actually.
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I'm going to go to the next slice down and do the
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same thing. In fact, I'm going to blow it up.
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So it's a little more obvious to you.
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There's your aqueduct of Sylvius.
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Now, I'm going to make my line along the
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back of the aqueduct of Sylvius
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and make an oblique line going this way.
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And I should have some full,
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rich tissue protruding outside that line.
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In other words,
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I should have some midbrain parenchyma doing this,
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bulging outside it, and I don't.
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So the more this gets sucked in,
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the more it looks something like this.
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You'll have your cerebral peduncle,
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and then as you come back,
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it'll start to go convex inward on you.
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Then you'll have your collicular plate in the back.
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The more convex inward it becomes,
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the more obvious this sign is,
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which is known as the morning glory sign,
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not to be confused with morning glory syndrome,
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which occurs in the optic disc of the eye
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in individuals.
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Completely unrelated.
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So you've got the hummingbird sign,
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you've got the morning glory sign.
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What's another sign of progressive supranuclear palsy?
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I'll give you a third sign.
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When you look at this midbrain,
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doesn't it look like the peduncles are a little
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too big for the rest of the midbrain?
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I think so.
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They look a little bit like this,
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kind of like two giant ears.
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Not on a dog, but on a mouse.
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Which mouse?
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Well, Mickey Mouse.
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So they're a little too big for the rest of the
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midbrain. And that's sign number three,
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the Mickey Mouse sign of progressive
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supranuclear palsy.
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Now, in the next vignette,
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I'll talk about some of the
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other signs that you may see in a few related
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disorders that can produce secondary
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progressive supranuclear palsy.
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So stay tuned for the hot cross bun sign,
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the hockey stick sign,
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and the pulvinar sign coming to a vignette near you.
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