Interactive Transcript
0:00
We're back with our 22-year-old, young woman.
0:04
We've got a beautiful, beautifully performed,
0:06
dynamic contrast enhanced MRI,
0:08
You can see, here is the pre.
0:10
And then immediately,
0:11
the lesion enhanced has got some cystic foci.
0:14
This is a coronal T1.
0:15
Sagittal T2-weighted fast spin-echo.
0:17
Coronal T2 fast spin-echo with a little scrolling.
0:20
Clearly, there is a sellar mass with suprasellar extension.
0:24
So, we talked about some of the approaches
0:27
to evaluating this lesion.
0:28
Is there blood in it?
0:29
Is there fat in it?
0:30
Is there calcium in it?
0:32
Are there cysts in it?
0:33
And this affects the differential diagnosis.
0:35
You know, you've got cyst,
0:37
you start thinking craniopharyngioma
0:38
or big macroadenoma.
0:40
You've got calcium,
0:41
you start thinking meningioma, craniopharyngioma.
0:44
You got fat in it,
0:45
you start thinking about lipoma or certain
0:47
types of proteinaceous material.
0:49
In fact, you may be thinking about dermoid.
0:52
You got blood in it,
0:53
you think about a big hemorrhagic
0:54
adenoma pituitary apoplexy.
0:57
Another question you should ask yourself,
0:58
"Is the patient an adult or child?"
1:01
If it's a child,
1:02
you're thinking about things like anorexia nervosa
1:04
and pituitary hyperplasia,
1:05
never be this big.
1:07
Hydrocephalus with prolapse of the
1:09
ventricles down in a child.
1:10
Pilocytic astrocytoma.
1:13
Craniopharyngioma.
1:14
In an adult, you're thinking mostly pituitary adenoma,
1:18
and maybe meningioma.
1:20
Another key question,
1:21
"Is the lesion intra or extra-axial?"
1:25
If it's extra-axial,
1:26
does it arise from the pituitary gland like this one does?
1:30
Or can you identify a separate pituitary gland
1:34
from the mass?
1:35
So you might say,
1:36
"Okay, let's look real carefully in here.
1:38
Do I see either a J-shaped structure like this
1:42
or a U-shaped structure like this,
1:44
that is separated from our lesion?"
1:46
And the answer is no, we do not.
1:49
Is it an intra-axial mass?
1:51
You know,
1:51
does it arise from the optic chiasm or the hypothalamus?
1:54
Let's scroll the sagittal.
1:56
I mean, where is the hypothalamus?
1:57
The hypothalamus is right over here.
2:00
Let me take my pen and mark it for you.
2:01
Right over there.
2:03
The optic chiasm?
2:04
Well, who knows?
2:05
It's squished.
2:06
As I'll get out, I can hardly see it.
2:09
What's the status of the third ventricle?
2:11
Let's have a look in the sagittal projection.
2:13
Did this thing comes from the third ventricle?
2:14
We'll, no, it didn't.
2:16
It's effacing the third ventricle.
2:18
It's displacing the third ventricle.
2:20
As we said,
2:20
is it cystic or solid?
2:22
But let's take that one step further.
2:24
If it's cystic,
2:25
does it have the characteristics of cerebrospinal fluid,
2:29
you need a true T1, a FLAIR and a T2 to tell that.
2:33
Because on one,
2:34
it may look like CSF.
2:35
On others, it may not.
2:37
An example of a cystic lesion.
2:39
A "cystic lesion" would be an epidermoid
2:42
but it doesn't match the cerebrospinal fluid.
2:45
So go ahead and drill a little bit deeper to try
2:49
and decide the exact character of the fat.
2:52
Is it simple fat or is it complex fat?
2:55
Is it acute blood? Or is it chronic blood?
2:58
Is it chunky calcium?
2:59
or is it stippled calcium?
3:01
Which you might see in a meningioma.
3:03
And is the CSF...
3:05
Is the cystic part true CSF
3:07
or is it a macerator of CSF?
3:10
And when you look at all the sequences,
3:12
it's really not a direct match for CSF.
3:15
That's the approach to dealing with suprasellar lesions.
3:18
Ready to move on?
3:20
Yes.
3:20
Let's do it.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.