Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Schupack, 53-year-old woman with headaches and dizziness.
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I've got for you a sagittal T1 without contrast,
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a coronal T1 without contrast,
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and an axial T2 without contrast showing a fluid
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fluid or potentially a blood fluid level.
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Now, one point I'd like to make before you talk about
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this case is that it's a combined lesion.
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And what I mean by that is there's definitely supra cellular
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involvement and there's definitely intracellular involvement.
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And the classic combined lesion would
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be the figure of eight macroadenoma.
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Another example of a combined lesion that will infiltrate where you
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can't separate the pituitary out from the supra cellar
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component would be a germinoma.
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But germinomas are not bright on the T1 weighted image,
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so that's going to heavily influence your differential diagnosis.
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Germinomas are solid, they're pretty smooth, they're pretty gray,
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and in fact, they're so densely packed with big polygonal cells.
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That they're hyperdense on CT.
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That's a very important point.
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And they are ISO intense uniformly on MRI.
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This is neither of those.
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It's not uniformly ISO intense.
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Yes, there's some ISO intensity,
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but it's got this blood fluid level,
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and it's got the wrong T1 signal intensity.
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When you see high signal T1 in the pituitary gland,
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you're thinking fat, you're thinking cholesterol,
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you're thinking cholesterin,
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you're thinking about dermoids, craniopharyngiomas, and perhaps this
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abnormality, which is a very important one to pick up right away,
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right?
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So if any of you should have the misfortune of taking the
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neurosurgery oral boards, you are going to see this case, okay?
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And there are going to be three questions that are going
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to be asked. First one, they're going to put it up.
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Diagnosis, but pituitary apoplexy, okay?
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Hemorrhage into the pituitary.
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Then the next question. Treatment, decompressive surgery.
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Okay, question three. When? Answer today.
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Okay. Surgical emergency. All right.
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A surprising number of these patients will end
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up dying without decompressive surgery.
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Now,
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it depends a little bit on the presentation.
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Some of them have subacute presentations,
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but the acute presentation a classic presentation.
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Altered mental status, ophthalmoplegia, acute onset, a headache.
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They can get brain stem compression.
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I've seen it get vasospasm.
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Okay, so this is a phone call for sure.
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Neurosurgical consultation for sure. And as I say,
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surgery today is the standard.
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Now, another issue is okay,
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so you have this patient in your scanner.
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You're sitting back there on the monitor, sizing it up.
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Tech comes back and says, Doctor,
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could you take a look at this patient?
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He's not looking very good.
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And I took the blood pressure.
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It's 80.
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Okay, what's the deal? Okay.
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It's profoundly hypopit. Solu-Medrol 100 IV now.
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Okay. Because these people will go out on you, all right?
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So clinical issues,
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you're their doctor while they're in the scanner, for sure, right.
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You can call anybody you want, but there's a treatment for that.
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So being familiar with this and the clinical implications,
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because these people will go out on you.
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Well, I mean,
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I hate to go anecdotal on an educational vignette like this,
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but my first encounter with this was 25 years ago.
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A colleague's father, who needed back surgery,
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waiting for the surgery. They go up to get him.
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He's uptunded. They bring him down.
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They do an MR scan on him.
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He's got one of these.
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And he had profound depression of cortisol,
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profound depression of thyroid hormone.
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And it took about eight days in the ICU to get him back up to speed,
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and he was in the hospital when this was detected.
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So you've got to pick up pituitary apoplexy.
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It's got to be right at the top of your list when you have
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an adult with a big lesion that has this high signal.
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And not only is there a fluid.
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Fluid level. It's a sandwich.
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It's bright and then it's gray and then it's dark gray.
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And so that layering effect very unusual with most lesions except
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for hemorrhagic adenomas bleeding. In the pituitary,
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I suppose you could see three layers in a dermoid.
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I haven't usually two layers,
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but this one is Pituitary apoplexy now also, so the cell is big.
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So there's probably a pre-existing macroadenoma.
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That's when you're going to see them.
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Now you can also get these non-hemorrhagic.
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That is a big pituitary.
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Infarct has also been described in it.
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And diffusion restriction,
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if you're wondering about that and you're saying, hey,
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what's going on here? They have this syndrome.
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And the diffusion image has been shown in some studies to be very
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helpful for the infarct one, which I think is less common.
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But I think I've seen it a couple of times.
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Sure, you're getting cell death.
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You also have a very kind of liquefactive viscous center to it.
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So diffusion restriction is helpful.
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And you're going to see a lesion.
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Practice, maybe on an axial CT.
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You'll have some hyperdensity on CT.
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The patient is slightly obtunded or acting funny,
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just like you said, and you don't think about it.
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You think, well, maybe it's a meningioma because it's hyperdense,
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or maybe it's an aneurysm.
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You have time to wait.
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Well, you really don't.
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So it's important that you assess the character of the density.
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Is it blood? Is it calcium on CT,
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or is it also important if it's calcified.
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You look. Is it stippled calcification?
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Is it chunky calcification?
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Is it arc-like calcification as in an aneurysm?
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Or is it just hyperdense?
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And there's absolutely no calcification,
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which would be the case in this scenario.
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So you're on ER call, you're reading some head CTs.
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You better have that in the back of your brain when you
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see a suprasellar mass right smack dab in the midline,
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that's somewhat hyperdense. And a 50-year-old.
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And they come in and they are just simply physically exhausted,
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depressed in their hypopit. Shall we move on?
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Yeah, let's.
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