Interactive Transcript
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This is a CT scan of the head
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in a three and a half-month-old with seizures,
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and they came into a community hospital,
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and it was thought to have blood related to a potentially
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hemorrhagic contusion or subarachnoid hemorrhage
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overlying the right cerebral hemisphere.
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So, they were sent to a tertiary care center.
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When looking at this,
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this doesn't really look like what I would
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expect blood products to look like.
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I'm not seeing edema.
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I'm also seeing asymmetric prominence of
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CSF overlying the right cerebral hemisphere.
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So that doesn't, that could be related
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to trauma, but it doesn't quite add up yet.
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Looking at it in the MR,
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here's the T2-weighted image,
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we're seeing prominence of the CSF
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space overlying the right cerebral hemisphere.
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We're seeing a paucity of cortical
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veins overlying the right cerebral
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hemisphere, you can see on the left we
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have a cortical vein here, here, here.
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So, we're seeing a paucity of cortical veins
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overlying the right cerebral hemisphere.
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And we're seeing this leptomeningeal
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enhancement overlying portions of the
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right parietal lobe and occipital lobe.
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And then in the right frontal lobe,
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we're seeing these transmantle collaterals.
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So, in the absence of significant cortical
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veins, in this region, the venous blood
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has to either go to the deep venous system
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through these transmantle collaterals,
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going eventually into the internal cerebral veins,
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or through these leptomeningeal collaterals,
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where they sort of transmit laterally or
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perpendicular to the surface,
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to find a place where there's some venous drainage.
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All of this results in chronic venous ischemia
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and congestion, resulting in volume loss
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and dystrophic mineralization as seen here.
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Well, we can notice
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that because of those transmantle collaterals,
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we're seeing some of the veins that
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drain into the internal cerebral vein,
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the right internal cerebral vein is bigger.
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You can see the right thalamostriate
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vein is much larger than the left.
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Seven years later, we can see that those
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veins have continued to hypertrophy.
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The right internal cerebral vein remains
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markedly enlarged, and this is a compensatory
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mechanism, and there has not been
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significant progression of the volume loss.
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At this time, we still see the transmantle
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collaterals in the frontal lobe.
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And predominantly leptomeningeal collaterals
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in the parietal and occipital lobe.
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Here's where we're starting to see some transmantle
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collaterals in the right temporal lobe.
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So, this shows the evolution of Sturge-Weber
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syndrome does not always result in severe
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chronic stepwise progression of the volume loss.
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Every single patient is different.
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There is a different degree of involvement,
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a different degree of collateral formation.
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And it may be that these enlarged deep draining
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veins end up decreasing the resistance and
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decreasing the amount of venous congestion.
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That's unclear, but what this shows is
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that the evolution of Sturge-Weber syndrome
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is different in every single patient.
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