Interactive Transcript
0:01
So in this case, I'm going to show,
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share with you T2-weighted image. A 55-year-old female,
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and T1.
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So let's do the T2-weighted image.
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So a lot going on in the pancreas here,
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and it may be of some utility to look at some other organs
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in this instance.
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Particularly the kidneys and maybe adrenal glands, as well.
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I'll give you the T1-weighted images.
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So no real hyperintense...
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T1 hyperintense content in some of the stuff that we're looking at.
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Then the post-contrast sequences to the pancreas,
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little bit of motion here.
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Apologize for that.
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Again, look at the other organs as well.
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A lot of stuff going on the others...
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some of the other organs.
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This is less motion here, so this may be easier for you to look at.
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Pancreas looks certainly very interesting, but some of the other organs do, as well.
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Okay, let's post our last question for the hour.
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So in this instance, I'm really asking the group to
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come up with a diagnosis of what they think this patient has.
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Based on that, asking you to maybe take it a step further.
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What's the most common CNS tumor seen in the disease that this patient has?
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Is it a Hemangioblastoma?
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Is it a Neurofibroma?
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Is it a GBM or a Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma?
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Known as SEGA tumors, I believe.
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I'm certainly no neurologist.
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So if there's a neurologist out there
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on the call, you know, you feel free to educate me
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a little bit if I'm incorrect about any of these things.
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Yes. So Hemangioblastoma.
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So it was the most...
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It was the correct answer, most people get.
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So what am I showing you here?
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So you're seeing a pancreas that is replaced by numerous, numerous cysts.
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And when you see that appearance, you got to think of Von Hippel-Lindau disease.
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Now, it's a rare disease.
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We see it in a select few patients.
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It is hereditary, autosomal dominant,
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and it affects multiple organs, resulting in multiple neoplasms.
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Now in the pancreas, you're going to see a bunch of cysts.
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Now, these,
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unlike other cysts and pancreas, tend to be true epithelial cysts.
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So the epithelial-lined (true) cyst
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to the pancreas. You also see serous cystadenomas.
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We know what that looks like now, and it's very tough to know if some
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of these are true cysts, or some of this could represent serous cystadenoma.
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But luckily, true cysts and serous cystadenomas are benign,
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so we don't worry about them.
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The one thing you can see in these patients
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are neuroendocrine tumors as well.
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And so you need to be on the lookout,
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particularly in your post-contrast sequences,
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to make sure you're not dealing with any neuroendocrine tumors.
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Because, of course, those are something that we need to worry about.
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But besides that, you see disease in other organs,
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and the kidneys here, he/she...
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This patient had partial nephrectomy,
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but you can see there's multiple renal neoplasms,
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which is characteristic of vulnerable
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and multiple bilateral renal neoplasms, that is.
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You can see a pheochromocytoma, which is another finding
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you can see in patients with Von Hippel-Lindau.
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In the epididymis, in male patients, you can see cysts or papillary cystadenomas.
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In the head and neck region, you can see endolymphatic sac tumors.
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And in the CNS, hemangioblastomas.
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They can happen in the cerebellum brainstem.
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But one area that I always look for is in the spinal cord.
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So you may end up getting cases where you're reading the abdomen,
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look at the spinal cord and you may just see a little focus of enhancement.
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If you do see that, that's probably going to be a hemangioblastoma.
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Now, a lot of these patients end up
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getting dedicated thoracic spine, lumbar spine MRI,
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so you don't necessarily need to make that diagnosis.
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But if you have endonovo case, it's good to know where,
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look at the kidneys, adrenal glands, pancreas.
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But if you really want to take it to that next level,
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sort of completing your understanding of the disease and adding value,
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look at the spinal cord to see if you see any tiny hemangioblastomas as well.
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They can also get choroid plexus papillomas
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in the CNS, under the CNS category.
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So this is a patient with Von Hippel-Lindau, who gets followed regularly with us
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to make sure that things are under control, and that these neoplasms aren't growing.
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