Interactive Transcript
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This is a CT scan of the head
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in a two-year-old child
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with known tuberous sclerosis complex.
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We can see this coarse calcification along the
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lateral margin of the anterior body of the right
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lateral ventricle along the anterior margin of
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the atrium of the left lateral ventricle with
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several additional areas of mineralization,
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some of which are very fine,
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some of which are more coarse.
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These are calcified subependymal nodules.
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We additionally see on CT scan the multifocal
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areas of cortical dysplasia.
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Now if we compare it to MR.
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Where we see these multifocal areas
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of dysplasia. Notice on MR.
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They're hyperintense on T2-weighted imaging
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in part because of high water content.
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Well, we know water is dark on CT scan,
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so it's not surprising that these areas
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of dysplasia are hypointense on CT.
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Now some of these,
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this is a moderate to severe burden of
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dysplasia. Some of these are confluent.
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This doesn't look like just one area of
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dysplasia. It's probably several.
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We can see the overlying sulcation
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pattern is irregular.
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We have this larger area with thickened cortex.
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We can see this area here in
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the left occipital lobe
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that looks like a cystic area of dysplasia.
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That is a known finding in
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tuberous sclerosis complex.
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Then post-contrast imaging shows multiple
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subependymal nodules enhancing.
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You can see this here is just a confluence of.
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Here's a nodule, here's a nodule,
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here's a nodule, here's a nodule.
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So there's multiple of them.
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The largest is along the lateral margin
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of the anterior body of the right lateral
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ventricle. And if I measure it,
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it's approximately 10 dimensions,
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approximately 7 transverse dimensions
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and approximately 9 cranial-caudal dimensions.
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this is sort of on the borderline threshold for
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what's typically referred to as
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a subependymal giant astrocytoma.
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But as I've mentioned before,
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the real important designation is not the
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calipers, it's the biological behavior.
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It's whether it's enlarging,
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it's whether it's impending impingement of
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the pyramid of Monroe. At the moment,
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we can imagine if this enlarges
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a little bit more,
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the Foramen of Monroe could end up being
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obstructed. Now fortunately,
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this is predominantly calcified.
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These areas of calcified dysplasia tend not to
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grow as fast because it's usually only the non
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calcified portion that's actively growing.
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This is still a lesion in this patient
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where we want to follow it closely.
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Now, one of the things of note,
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if we look at diffusion-weighted imaging,
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we're seeing this.
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Hyperintense signal in the
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hypothalami bilaterally.
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See, here's the globus pallidus.
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We go a little bit inferior.
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It's the hypothalami.
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We're also seeing a little bit of hyperintense
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signal in the central tegmental
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tracts in the brainstem.
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What is this? Well, if you haven't seen it,
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it's hard to know,
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but it turns out that this is a very
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characteristic appearance of what's
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called myelinic edema.
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So it's edema within the myelin associated
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with vigabatrin therapy.
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Vigabatrin is an antiepileptic agent that
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is often given for a variety of clinical
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presentations of seizures.
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And
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if the doses are too high for a given patient,
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you may sometimes see that abnormality.
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Now, if you see this myelinic edema,
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it's important to let the epileptologist
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know this.
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They may choose to reduce the dose of the agent.
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They may choose to keep it the same.
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There's no single best answer for every patient.
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They will know if that given patient,
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if reducing the dose a little bit,
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if that results in more seizures,
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it's not worth it.
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If they can reduce the dose a little bit
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and not have any increase in seizures,
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it may be appropriate.
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Well, in this patient, they reduced the dose,
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and we can see three months later that myelinic
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edema went away. So it is a reversible finding.
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So this is a patient with tuberous sclerosis complex
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with a moderate to severe burden
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of areas of cortical dysplasia,
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including one area of cystic dysplasia.
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This patient has multiple subependymal nodules,
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which are mineralized,
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one of which is approaching 10.
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They had myelinic edema,
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likely from vigabatrin therapy,
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that the myelinic edema resolved
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after cessation of the therapy.
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Why do I mention the lesion burden?
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Well,
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there's not a one-to-one correlation between the
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amount of dysplasia someone
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has and their seizures.
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But the more areas of dysplasia someone has,
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the more likely they are to have seizures,
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the more likely they are to have severe
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and uncontrolled seizures.
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They may have more different types of seizures.
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They may have seizures that are
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refractory to medication,
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and also a higher degree of lesion burden tends
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to correlate with a lower degree of
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intellectual functioning. Again,
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every individual is different. It.
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But these are findings that can help guide
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the neurologist in the family,
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especially when there's a young child,
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and you don't know how bad their seizures will
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be or what their intellectual
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development will be.
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