Interactive Transcript
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This 75-year-old woman
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with gait disturbance
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and a gaze palsy,
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with basically a movement problem.
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Parkinsonian-like has progressive supranuclear palsy
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or Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome.
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In another vignette,
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I pointed out the preservation
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of the Zona Compacta stripe,
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which goes against the diagnosis of
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classic Parkinson's disease.
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Now, let's look at the brain stem,
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especially the midbrain.
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Look at how small the midbrain is sagittally.
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It's not as easy to appreciate in the axial
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projection, although in an earlier vignette,
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I gave you the Mickey Mouse sign and the morning
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glory sign to help you decide whether
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the midbrain is too small or not.
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Now, there are three disorders that resemble
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progressive supranuclear palsy that do not have
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midbrain atrophy until the later stages of the disease.
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These include MSA, multisystem atrophy,
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corticobasal degeneration,
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and Parkinson's disease.
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So when midbrain atrophy is a prominent
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or early component of the disease,
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you've got to start thinking about PSP,
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especially when the superior collicular plate is absent.
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Now, there are secondary causes of a PSP-like syndrome
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where there is vertical gaze palsy
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and some of the other signs of this disorder,
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which is basically dysfunction of the
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nigrostriatal dopaminergic system,
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as well as other movement disorders.
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Ad these include,
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let's go up to the thalamus.
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Unfortunately, there is a gliotic spot here.
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It's related to hypertension.
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So the patient has had a gliotic vascular injury
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along with État criblé lacunaire
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from hypertension.
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And this patient does not demonstrate the hockey
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stick sign of one of the secondary causes of
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progressive supranuclear palsy-like syndrome,
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which is JC disease or Jakob-Creutzfeldt disease,
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also known as prion-mediated disease.
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So, the hockey stick sign will look a little bit like this.
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It's often bilateral,
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and it may involve both sides of the thalami.
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So it may involve both pulvinars at the same time.
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So you may see something that looks like this,
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some signal in the pulvinaric region
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posteriorly on both sides,
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and this is known as the pulvinar sign.
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Unfortunately,
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you can see this with some metabolic disorders,
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including Wernicke's encephalopathy
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and Wilson's disease
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and a few other disorders.
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But chronic pulvinaric signal that persists over a
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period of time, with diffusion restriction,
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without enhancement, should alert you to the potential
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diagnosis of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
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or Jakob Creutzfeldt disease
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as a potential secondary cause
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of progressive supranuclear palsy.
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Now, I want to turn your attention
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back once again to the sagittal
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just to highlight the hummingbird sign,
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which, by the way, also has another name,
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the King penguin sign,
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if you are a bird lover.
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Let's move on and talk a little bit more about
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PSP or progressive supranuclear palsy.
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