Interactive Transcript
0:01
This is a CT scan of a nine-year-old child
0:03
with seizures and a right-sided facial
0:08
birthmark called the port wine stain.
0:11
And this patient has Sturge-Weber syndrome.
0:15
You can see there's asymmetric prominence
0:17
to CSF and sulci overlying the right
0:19
cerebral hemisphere compared to the left,
0:21
related to right-sided volume loss.
0:24
We see some focal areas of
0:26
dystrophic mineralization.
0:29
T2-weighted imaging shows, again,
0:32
the prominence of CSF overlying the right
0:35
cerebral hemisphere, related to the
0:37
asymmetric right-sided volume loss.
0:40
We're also seeing a slightly hypointense
0:42
appearance of the juxtacortical white matter
0:47
subjacent to this area.
0:50
And we're seeing extensive leptomeningeal
0:52
enhancement overlying this whole region.
0:54
So, while there's only a very focal area
0:57
of calcification, almost this entire
0:59
area of volume loss has post-contrast
1:02
enhancement on the leptomeningeal surface.
1:05
So, this child was nine years old.
1:09
If we compare their MR at nine years of age
1:15
until their MR at 17 years of age,
1:18
we can see there's been profound progression of
1:21
volume loss in the right cerebral hemisphere.
1:24
There's been some degree of volume loss in the
1:25
left cerebral hemisphere, which is nonspecific.
1:28
It can be related to chronic seizures,
1:32
other issues, but there's definitely
1:34
been a profound progression of the volume
1:36
loss in the right cerebral hemisphere.
1:39
We see this development of asymmetric
1:42
prominence of the diploid space
1:43
overlying the right cerebral hemisphere,
1:45
which is the Dyke-Davidoff-Masson phenomenon
1:48
related to chronic volume loss.
1:50
We see x vacuole enlargement of the atrium and
1:55
occipital horn of the right lateral ventricle as
1:57
compared to the prior study, whereas a similar
2:01
caliber of the atrium and occipital horn of left
2:04
lateral ventricle compared to the prior study.
2:06
Thank you for listening.
2:08
So, this shows the volume loss associated
2:12
with Sturge-Weber syndrome occurs over time.
2:16
It is not a single event.
2:18
This is felt to be related to chronic
2:21
venous congestion, chronic injury,
2:26
and slow progressive volume loss that results in
2:29
dystrophic mineralization, and that volume loss
2:35
due to cell injury or the result in dystrophic mineralization,
2:38
tends to be epileptogenic,
2:40
and therefore, these patients get seizures
2:44
as their brain gets more injured,
2:46
it becomes potentially more epileptogenic.
2:48
So, unfortunately, it has the potential of
2:50
being a feedback loop where the seizures
2:53
eventually get harder and harder to control.
2:56
So, you can see all the areas where there was
2:59
enhancement at nine years of age,
3:03
several years later, had had more profound volume loss.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.