Interactive Transcript
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This is an MR of the brain in an eight-year-old
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with seizures and there are some abnormalities
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in the left temporal pole with some abnormal
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enhancement that we'll evaluate in a moment.
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But I want to point out this enhancement
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in the left internal auditory canal.
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It's fairly subtle.
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We don't see anything in the
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right internal auditory canal.
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The patient had yearly surveillance for
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her epilepsy and approximately three years
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later, the left-sided lesion had enlarged
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to nearly fill the internal auditory canal.
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but not extend through or
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expand the porus acousticus.
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And there's some abnormal enhancement
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in the right internal auditory canal.
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So this patient has neurofibromatosis type
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2, although it was not initially known.
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If we fast forward a few years, we
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now have a more classic appearance
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of lesions filling bilaterally,
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extending through the porus acousticus.
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And having a rounded component in the cerebral
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pontine angle cistern, people have sometimes
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referred to this morphology as looking like
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an ice cream cone, where you have the cone,
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being the enhancing portion, conforming to
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the boundaries of the internal auditory canal.
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Then the ice cream on top, where it can sort
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of balloon out less constrained by the bony
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confines of the internal auditory canal.
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So this lesion, if we fast forward
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a few more years, gets much larger.
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We see the component in the cerebro
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pontine angle cistern has grown significantly,
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causes marked mass effect upon the pons.
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the middle cerebellar peduncle and the
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cerebellar hemispheres bilaterally, and it's
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starting to distort the fourth ventricle.
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You can see another year
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later, it grows even further.
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So there's significant mass
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effect upon the brainstem.
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Now, This patient has a number of other
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manifestations of neurofibromatosis
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type 2 that, due to the complexity, I'm
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going to discuss in a separate case.
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But right now, in this case, we're going
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to focus on the cerebral pontineangle
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cisterns and the vestibular schwannomas.
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So how do you treat these?
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This patient was developing bilateral
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sensorineural hearing loss, not to
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mention the mass effect upon the brainstem.
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Well, on an audiogram, a vestibular
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schwannoma has a very characteristic
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description of a retrocochlear disorder.
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Sensorineural hearing loss.
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That means it's deep to the cochlea.
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So because the hearing loss is related to mass
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effect upon the cochlear nerve, a cochlear
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implant device will not help this patient
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because the cochlea is not the problem.
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The problem is the transmission
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from the cochlea to the brainstem.
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So how do they do that?
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Well, the hearing can possibly
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be addressed by decompressing the
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cerebral pontine angle cistern lesion.
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and this patient underwent a left-sided
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translabyrinthine approach to the cerebral
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pontineal cistern for a section of that
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the left side of the vestibular schwannoma.
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So, because of the translabyrinthine
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approach, the cochlea and the cochlear
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nerve themselves were no longer going
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to be able to function for hearing.
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That doesn't eliminate the chances of
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this patient having some degree of hearing
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restoration attempted on the left side.
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Why is that?
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Well, it is possible for them to have, and
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we can see this hypointense line right here.
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This is a brainstem implant.
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And there's a set of patch electrodes
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that go on the surface of the brainstem,
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approximately the lateral surface of the
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medulla oblongata in the region of the olivary
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nuclei, instead of a cochlear implant which
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stimulates the cochlear nerve in the cochlea.
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This attempts to stimulate
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the nerves in the brainstem.
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So if we remember the auditory pathway
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going, once it goes into the brainstem,
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going to the superior olivary nucleus, the
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lateral lemniscus, the inferior colliculi,
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and the medial geniculate nucleus.
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This attempts to stimulate that pathway.
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So while there has been destruction of the inner
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ear structures and the cochlear nerve in order
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to relieve the brainstem mass effect, there
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is still an attempt at hearing preservation.
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And these devices can be MRI compatible
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with appropriate MRI scanning parameters.
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Now the right sided lesion still remains.
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still very large.
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If we look, it's almost four centimeters.
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So, the right sided lesion may need to
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get addressed at some point also, and
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as we see in this case, in this image,
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the right sided lesion, the cerebral
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pontine angle component was resected.
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Now, the internal auditory
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canal component was not.
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This resection relieved the mass effect
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upon the brainstem, but did not resect
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the component in the internal auditory
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canal, which is very difficult to access.
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Now, the left side, they were able to access
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it because of the translabyrinthine approach.
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Okay.
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In this case, they performed
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a retrosigmoid approach.
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reconstruction material overlying their
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approach, and they go between the skull base and
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the cerebellum to resect the lesion, whereas on
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the left side, they performed a mastoidectomy
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and went through the vestibule and semicircular
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canals, which are no longer present.
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The cochlea is present now
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traversing this resection cavity
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where we see fat packing material.
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We see the lead for the brainstem implant
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as an attempt at hearing preservation.
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So we can see the very profound evolution
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from a subtle enhancing lesion that was
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not initially identified to these very
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large bilateral vestibular schwannomas.
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Now, I will say an incidental finding
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of neurofibromatosis type 2 and subtle
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enhancement in the intralabyrinthine canal,
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it's not unexpected sometimes for
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that to not be initially identified.
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This is not a place that's
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normally in our search pattern.
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And since this patient was receiving imaging
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surveillance for her epilepsy, this did not
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result in any alteration in care because Once
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this was identified and once it was known
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she had neurofibromatosis type two, the
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patient would just get imaging surveillance and
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audiograms until there was need for surgical
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intervention, which It was almost a decade
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after the neurofibromatosis type two diagnosis
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was confirmed before she did go to surgery.
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So while it's ideal to find this the first
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time, fortunately in this case, it did
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not have a negative impact in delaying the
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diagnosis because it was still almost a
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decade before any intervention was performed.
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So this shows the evolution.
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of vestibular schwannomas from a
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very subtle incidental finding to
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very large findings that eventually
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require bilateral surgical procedures.
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