Interactive Transcript
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This is an MRI of the brain
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in a 15-year-old child who,
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when she was younger,
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had a cerebellar hemangioblastoma removed.
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There were no other lesions identified
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in her brain or spine, and there was no
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recurrence seen on surveillance imaging
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for a few years, and so all was well.
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She then presented with headaches, and
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an MRI showed this cystic appearing
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lesion with this enhancing component.
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Let's see on T2 weighted imaging.
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The cystic appearing part is very
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circumscribed, has central fluid contents
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that are hyperintense on T2 weighted imaging.
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The nodule does not demonstrate
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diffusion restriction; the central
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contents demonstrate facilitated
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diffusion, and that nodule is enhancing.
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So, for children and adolescents, a cerebellar
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lesion that is cystic with an enhancing
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nodule, it is very characteristic but it is not
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uniquely diagnostic of a pilocytic astrocytoma.
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In this patient, this is a hemangioblastoma.
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The differences are several
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fold in the clinical implication.
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First of all, in a pilocytic astrocytoma,
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the enhancing area enhances because of
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a leaky blood-brain barrier, but normal
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or even lower than normal blood flow.
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But because there's a leaky blood-brain
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barrier, the contrast accumulates in the
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interstitial space and actually accumulates
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more on progressive and delayed imaging.
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In a hemangioblastoma, this is
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related to arterial prominence.
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This is arterial enhancement; it
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enhances early, and just as importantly,
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is at surgery, it has the potential
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to bleed like an artery would bleed.
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So this patient who previously was thought
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to have a sporadic hemangioblastoma
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now has another hemangioblastoma,
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but that's not the only finding.
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There's another enhancing lesion in the
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contralateral cerebellar hemisphere,
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and if we go inferiorly, we see
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an enhancing lesion at the OBEX.
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While the OBEX lesion and the right
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cerebellar lesion appear solid, they also
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represent hemangioblastomas, just without
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the cystic component that occurs over time.
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The constellation of multiple
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hemangioblastomas is, in this case,
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diagnostic of von Hippel-Lindau syndrome.
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Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome has multiple
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hemangioblastomas that are typically
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either of the cerebellum or the spine.
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And one of the places where these
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hemangioblastomas often will occur is the OBEX.
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very much.
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which is important to look at because it's an
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area that can be missed on brain imaging, and
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it may be too high to look at on spine imaging.
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It also has the potential of resulting in
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a fourth ventricular outflow obstruction.
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Patients with Von Hippel-Lindau
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syndrome get other inherited tumors.
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One of the most common that
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people are aware of is renal cell
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carcinomas, which can be bilateral.
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It can be multicentric even in one kidney.
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So it's important when looking at
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spine imaging in a patient for Von
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Hippel-Lindau syndrome, when you're
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looking for spinal hemangioblastomas,
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to look as best you can at the kidneys.
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Similarly, when you're looking at abdominal
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imaging, to look for abdominal lesions of
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the nipple window to look at the spine.
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Now renal cell carcinoma is not the
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only abdominal and retroperitoneal
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tumor that they can have.
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They can feel chromocytomas.
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They can have pancreatic cysts.
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They can have pancreatic cell tumors.
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So these inherited tumor syndromes
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have a myriad of potential findings.
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Every single patient may have
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a different manifestation.
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No two patients will look exactly the same.
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So it's, well, it's important to be
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aware of what the characteristic, you
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know, lesions are and what, what a
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prototypical patient will look like.
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Look for all the possible findings.
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Now, there's another finding that is seen in
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the skull base in Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome.
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This patient does not have it.
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It's usually not seen until people
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are adults, but it is a papillary
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cyst adenoma at the endolymphatic sac.
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There's a variety of findings like that.
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They also can get.
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Retinal enhancing lesions that end up
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being equivalent to hemangioblastoma.
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Actually, Dr.
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Von Hippel of the Von Hippel-Lindau
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syndrome was an ophthalmologist.
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And prior to modern medical imaging,
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ophthalmologists were the only people who
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could non-invasively view the central nervous
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system through their fundoscopic exam.
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It's interesting that a lot of
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these neurocutaneous syndromes
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have eye manifestations, and some
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of which can be seen on imaging.
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So this patient has Multiple hemangioblastomas,
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and these are multicentric because each one is a
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separate entity that developed from a different
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mutation in the setting of a germline mutation.
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They're not metastatic lesions.
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They have multiple hemangioblastomas in
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the setting of Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome.
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And we can see their post-op day one imaging.
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You can see resection of this lesion
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here and resection of the OBEX lesion.
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And the Lesion over on the right cerebellar
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hemisphere surface was just going to be watched
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at this time, not because it was not felt to
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be important, but because it was not possible
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through a single approach to access both.
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So at this time, they did not go after
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this one, but they had a gross total
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resection of the left cerebellar lesion
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that was a cystic lesion with an enhancing
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neural nodule, and also the OBEX lesion.
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