Interactive Transcript
0:00
If you take all comers who demonstrate white
0:04
matter lesions, we would have to say that
0:07
vascular etiologies are the most common.
0:10
And the two most common would be
0:12
microangiopathy and migraines.
0:15
By microangiopathy, we mean those small white
0:18
matter lesions that occur in the periventricular
0:20
and subcortical region in the elderly
0:22
patients who have atherosclerotic disease.
0:26
And it used to be that I would dictate
0:28
these as multiple periventricular
0:31
and subcortical white matter lesions,
0:33
associated with small vessel ischemic disease.
0:36
However, in the era of Epic and MyChart,
0:40
I found that the patients were calling
0:43
the clinicians and inquiring about what it
0:45
means for small vessel ischemic disease.
0:48
By saying the word ischemic,
0:50
you're implying that the white matter is
0:52
not getting enough blood supply.
0:54
And the patients were, you know, disturbed
0:57
by this and calling their clinicians.
0:59
And then, of course, the clinicians would call me and say,
1:01
"Do you have to use
1:02
that term small vessel ischemic disease?"
1:05
So nowadays, I kind of use the term
1:08
microangiopathic white matter changes
1:11
rather than ischemic disease.
1:13
And then, I usually use the caveat,
1:15
age-appropriate or greater than expected for age.
1:20
If I say that it's greater than expected for age,
1:23
these little white matter lesions,
1:25
then I usually will follow it by saying,
1:28
recommend clinical correlation for risk factors of
1:32
smoking, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes,
1:37
family history, and sedentary lifestyle.
1:40
So, those are the typical risk factors
1:42
for these little small vessel,
1:44
white matter, focal lesions that occur in the
1:48
periventricular and subcortical region.
1:51
They may occur in and of themselves
1:53
without any deep gray matter involvement.
1:56
Once you have deep gray matter involvement
1:58
then I will use the term lacunar disease in
2:02
the basal ganglia for the same entity of
2:05
Small Vessel Microangiopathic Disease or Leukoangia.
2:09
Leukoaraiosis is another
2:12
term that sometimes is utilized.
2:14
But I had to make a change in using that term,
2:17
Chronic Small Vessel Ischemic Disease,
2:19
once we had the MyChart with
2:22
patients looking up their own MRI reports.
2:26
So that's the, sort of the, the
2:27
elderly population, if you will.
2:29
By elderly, uh, you know, we usually say
2:31
that we will grant one white matter lesion
2:34
per decade of life and call it normal.
2:37
Which means that if you're in your forties, we'll say,
2:39
"Well, you can have up to 4 or 5 small white matter
2:43
lesions that we would say are within the
2:45
usual standard of the patient's age."
2:49
60 years old, six or seven of them.
2:52
So, if you see more than that,
2:53
it's when I start to blow the whistle and say,
2:56
"Recommend correlation for risk
2:57
factors of atherosclerotic disease."
3:00
In the younger age group, we're usually
3:03
concerned about white matter lesions
3:05
that are in the periphery,
3:07
just in the subcortical region, and those are
3:10
manifestations of migraine headaches.
3:12
So, small dots of high signal intensity in
3:15
the periphery without involvement of the
3:17
periventricular white matter is more commonly
3:20
seen in the patients who have migraines.
3:23
When you have florid involvement of the white
3:25
matter in a more confluent fashion, as well as
3:29
diffuse deep gray matter lacunar infarctions,
3:34
we may think of the entity of subcortical
3:36
arteriosclerotic, sclerotic encephalopathy.
3:39
This is obviously a syndrome in
3:41
which there is cognitive change.
3:43
This is usually elderly patients who
3:45
have hypertension, often with smoking.
3:48
And the term that is also used for
3:49
this is Binswangers, or we use SAE
3:53
for Subcortical Arteriosclerotic Encephalopathy.
3:57
So, this is microangiopathy gone
4:01
wild with diffuse confluent disease.
4:05
These are usually patients who have,
4:07
indeed, lacunar infarctions of the basal
4:09
ganglia or the striatocapsular region.
4:12
And finally, the other vascular etiology
4:14
which we'll talk about is CADASIL,
4:16
which I'll describe in just a moment.
4:19
What are we thinking about with regard to migraines?
4:21
In general, the patient who has
4:23
migraines are these tiny little dots
4:25
out in the periphery of the brain that
4:28
are seen in patients with migraines.
4:31
So usually, we're seeing them a little
4:33
bit more peripheral than this, usually
4:36
not affecting the periventricular zone,
4:39
but off in the periphery of the brain.
4:42
And this is a pattern which is
4:45
seen in patients with migraines.
4:48
However, there is a differential diagnosis for this.
4:51
So, we would probably include the so
4:54
called small vessel ischemic disease.
4:56
even if, in the absence of the
4:59
periventricular white matter lesions.
5:01
The other thing that can be do,
5:03
can lead to a similar appearance, is repetitive trauma.
5:08
So, in those patients who are athletes or have
5:12
repetitive trauma, they do tend to get little
5:15
white matter lesions out in the periphery.
5:17
They may also see something in
5:19
the central white matter,
5:21
for example, in the corpus callosum.
5:23
But this would be our chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
5:26
Most patients with CTE, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy,
5:30
have nothing on their MRI scan.
5:32
However, you may see, in some patients,
5:36
these tiny little dots.
5:37
So, traumatic injury.
5:40
This may be elicited by a patient
5:44
history of a previous concussion from
5:45
a motor vehicle collision, for example.
5:48
And that may explain some white
5:50
matter lesions in the periphery if
5:52
the patient does not have migraines.
5:54
and does not have any vascular risk factors.
5:58
Continuing on the theme of vascular
6:00
etiologies of white matter disease.
6:03
I come to CADASIL, and a CADASIL refers to
6:08
cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with
6:13
subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy.
6:18
So with CADASIL, we find a characteristic
6:22
location of the white matter disease.
6:25
And that characteristic location is
6:27
in the anterior aspect of the temporal lobes
6:30
with subcortical white matter changes
6:32
that you see here bilaterally.
6:35
The second most common characteristic
6:37
location is in the external capsule
6:40
where you see here bilateral high
6:42
signal intensity on the FLAIR images.
6:46
That combination, which may occur in addition
6:50
to periventricular and subcortical white
6:53
matter changes, but that combination of
6:56
external capsule and anterior temporal lobe
6:58
involvement is sort of classic for CADASIL,
7:02
cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy
7:08
with subcortical infarcts
7:10
and leukoencephalopathy.
7:12
CADASIL is an entity that can
7:15
be a source of cognitive change.
7:22
It may be a lesion that has a predilection
7:26
for migraine headaches and can lead to
7:30
patients with episodes of stroke-like illness.
7:33
So, CADASIL.
7:36
CADASIL differential diagnosis includes
7:39
Binswanger's disease, or that SAE
7:41
we mentioned before, the subcortical
7:43
arteriosclerotic encephalopathy.
7:48
So, on the top, we have the examples of CADASIL,
7:53
on the bottom, we have examples of Binswanger's.
7:56
What's the difference?
7:57
CADASIL has, in particular,
8:00
the anterior temporal lobe involvement,
8:02
which as you can see, is not present.
8:05
on the patients with Binswanger's disease.
8:07
Binswanger's generally has more in the
8:10
way of lacunar infarctions in the basal
8:14
ganglia, which you see relative sparing of
8:16
the basal ganglia in patients with CADASIL.
8:19
Both of them can have fluffy
8:22
confluent white matter disease.
8:24
And as you can see, the patients
8:28
with CADASIL, typically have
8:30
that external capsule involvement.
8:32
However, in this particular case of
8:34
Binswangers, you also see the involvement
8:36
of the external capsule bilaterally.
8:39
So, that is not as specific as the
8:42
anterior temporal lobe involvement.
8:44
And CADASIL generally can go out even to the
8:47
deep white matter of the subcortical U fibers.
8:50
This is a differential diagnosis.
8:52
CADASIL patients may not have hypertension,
8:55
but almost all Binswangers or SAE patients
8:58
have hypertension, and quite often
8:59
these patients, as I said, are smokers.
9:02
CADASIL is a younger age group, and as I said,
9:05
it's osmo dominant for this notch gene that
9:09
we search for in serology, and usually
9:13
a younger presentation than Binswanger's.
9:18
This is a patient who has
9:21
a brain that shows high signal intensity in the
9:25
periventricular and subcortical white matter,
9:27
associated with volume loss.
9:30
So here, you see that white matter in
9:31
the periventricular is somewhat fluffy-looking,
9:34
and out in the periphery,
9:37
you see the subcortical white matter or deep white
9:41
matter involvement that is also confluent.
9:44
So, this patient is a patient who
9:46
has atherosclerotic risk factors and
9:48
this is an example of a relatively
9:51
fulminant case of what I would call
9:53
chronic small vessel ischemic disease.
9:57
And because of this diffuse involvement,
10:00
no matter what this patient's age,
10:01
I would say, greater than expected for age.
10:05
Recommend clinical evaluation
10:07
for atherosclerotic risk factors.
10:09
That's how I handle this type of involvement.
10:13
There are different grading systems,
10:15
so-called Fazekas, F-A-Z-E-K-A-S,
10:18
for the involvement of the white matter disease,
10:21
if you want to give a scale for the
10:25
involvement, depending upon whether it's just
10:28
solitary or multiple areas, or more confluent
10:31
areas or extension out into the peripheral
10:33
white matter.
10:35
This would be the different grades of
10:37
white matter disease by the FAZEKAS scale.
10:41
Of the other vascular etiologies of
10:44
white matter demyelination,
10:45
one can have numerous vascularities that can
10:48
cause focal white matter lesions.
10:50
These are almost all of the collagen
10:52
vascular disease and mixed connective tissue
10:54
diseases, et cetera, rheumatoid, et cetera.
10:56
You can also see this with Sjogren's
10:58
syndrome, with lupus, generally on the basis
11:01
of the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome,
11:04
which the patient is hypercoagulable
11:06
and can have small ischemic infarcts.
11:09
You can have granulomatous,
11:10
primary angiitis of the central nervous system.
11:14
This is probably the most common of the vasculitis.
11:16
And then we have more of a,
11:18
sort of infectious etiology with Behcet's syndrome.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.