Interactive Transcript
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This was a patient who presented to the
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emergency room for suspected infarction
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involving the brainstem.
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Here we have the axial T2-weighted scan,
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the axial FLAIR scan,
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and I suppose we should have the diffusion
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weighted scan if we're evaluating
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a patient for infarction.
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As we can see on the diffusion-weighted
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imaging to the far right,
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there is no evidence of high signal intensity
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commensurate with an infarction,
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and the distribution of the lesions on the MR scan
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are atypical for an infarct.
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What you see,
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if we focus on the FLAIR scan,
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is abnormal signal intensity in the dentate
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nucleus of the cerebellum,
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as well as the posterior brainstem,
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extending to the white matter of the middle
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cerebellar peduncles, bilaterally.
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You see involvement of the periaqueductal gray matter
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extending to the superior cerebellar
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peduncle on the left side.
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In addition,
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there are areas of abnormal signal intensity
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in the white matter in an arc-like fashion
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in the subcortical white matter.
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We also see bilateral involvement
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of the red nuclei,
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as well as the central brain
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stem and the thalami.
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Further peripherally,
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we see white matter involvement
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in the corona radiata on the left side,
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and then crossing the corpus callosum,
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superiorly.
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There is subcortical involvement bilaterally
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in the frontal lobes.
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There aren't too many disorders that are going
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to affect so much variable anatomy in the brain,
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that is, cerebellar white matter,
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brainstem, midbrain extensively,
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going down into the white matter,
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into the corpus callosum.
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This is a very bizarre pattern.
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It's a little bit too extensive and bilateral
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and too many disjointed lesions for
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it to represent an astrocytoma,
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although that's a possibility.
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One might also consider lymphoma,
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and therefore we would look at the ADC maps
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to see whether there is diffusion restriction,
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which there was not.
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What else could we be dealing with?
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We could be dealing with encephalomyelitis
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and encephalitis, and that is a possibility,
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particularly in a patient who has
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an abrupt onset of disease,
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that you could be representing a potentially
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viral or tick-related encephalitis.
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When we look at the post-contrast scan,
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it's somewhat helpful because there is
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absence of contrast enhancement.
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That would pretty much exclude
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most high-grade neoplasms,
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as well as in our differential
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diagnosis of lymphoma.
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When we think about a child that might have
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white matter lesions,
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deep gray matter lesions,
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brainstem lesions,
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and cerebellar lesions,
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we have to raise the possibility of acute
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disseminated encephalomyelitis,
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which is indeed what this patient
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finally had a final diagnosis.
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What else would be in our
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differential diagnosis?
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Kind of hard to think of other lesions that
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affect such a wide swath of the brain
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besides an infectious encephalitis
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or a demyelinating disorder such as ADEM.
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