Interactive Transcript
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Up till now,
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we've been talking about demyelinating
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disorders where we have normal white
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matter that is being destroyed
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by various disease processes.
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When we refer to dysmyelinating disorders,
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we're usually talking about white matter
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diseases in which the white matter
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was never good from birth,
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or that there is a process that is leading
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to the abnormal formation of white matter.
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With regard to the dysmyelinating
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disorders, these are very uncommon causes.
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They're very uncommon diseases. However,
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among them,
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the most common is metachromatic
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leukodystrophy and adrenal leukodystrophy,
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and we're going to emphasize those two
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as representatives of dysmyelinating
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disorders. Nonetheless,
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you see that there are quite a number of
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various entities here that are listed that
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can lead to abnormal white matter
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formation or hypomyelination,
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in which the white matter never
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forms normally. In addition,
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there are other metabolic disorders that
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will lead to abnormal development
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or creation of white matter.
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So we're going to lump all of these under
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the dysmyelinating disorders.
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As I mentioned,
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metachromatic leukodystrophy is thought
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to be one of the most common of
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the dysmyelinating disorders.
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And like many of these disorders,
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there is often a very young infantile
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version. There's a childhood version,
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and there's an adult version of
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metachromatic leukodystrophy.
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And along with that,
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you may see varying severity
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of this disease.
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This disease is associated with diffuse
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abnormal white matter signal and something
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that we call a tigroid appearance of
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the periventricular white matter.
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By tigroid appearance,
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you'll see that there are tiny little dots
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within the white matter that is likened
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to the tiger stripes, if you will.
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This particular disorder is due
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to arylsulfatase deficiency,
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which is an enzyme that is required
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to make the myelin sheath.
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The patient's symptoms include
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gait disturbance, strabismus,
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various eye problems,
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as well as speech disturbance and absence
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of making milestones as a child.
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The key to metachromatic leukodystrophy
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is this tigroid appearance on MRI,
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as well as relative sparing
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of the U fiber.
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So it's much more of a central
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white matter disease.
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Let's look at it on slides.
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Here we have a T1-weighted scan to the
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left and a T2-weight scan
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on the right-hand side.
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And what one sees is a symmetric white
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matter abnormality that is, in general,
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sparing the U fibers.
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By central, I mean,
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that is in a periventricular zone.
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Here's our ventricles.
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But doesn't go out to the far
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periphery of the brain.
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It stays in this central area
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by the tigroid appearance.
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What I'm referring to are these little
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dots that you're seeing in.
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That white matter,
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that is what is referred to
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as the tigroid appearance.
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And sometimes it's better demonstrated
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at other times,
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but generally around the frontal
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horns in particular,
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you may see these little dots of darker
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signal amidst the bright signal,
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which is the tigroid appearance.
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This is from a radiographics article that
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was demonstrating metachromatic
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leukodystrophy and the tigroid
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stripes of that entity.
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So again,
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this is from radiographics in 2002.
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But what one is seeing are these little
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dots of bright signal intensity within the
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central white matter. As you can see,
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maybe on the left side,
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better than the right.
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Absence of involvement of the periphery,
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the subcortical U fibers.
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And on the section that's
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a little bit lower,
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maybe this is a little bit more of the
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tigroid striped look of the somewhat
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spared myelin amidst the bright
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signal intensity.
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Abnormal myelin of metachromatic
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leukodystrophy in keeping with
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our use of abbreviations,
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people will write down often MLD for this
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entity, metachromatic leukodystrophy, MLD.
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Among the other dysmyelinating disorders,
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there are some that are associated
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with macrocephaly,
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and those are Canavan's disease and
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Alexander's disease. Fortunately,
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Canavan's disease is an entity that is
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a diagnosis that can be made with the
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combination of MR Spectroscopy.
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Because of the N-acetyl aspartate
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peak changes,
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those that are involving the posterior
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white matter somewhat selectively
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are adrenoleukodystrophy and
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adrenomyelodystrophy.
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Let's take a look at those.
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So, of those, we mentioned,
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Canavan's disease.
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Canavan's disease tends to have
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a macrocephalia, large head.
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In a child with a frontal predilection
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for involvement.
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It favors the subcortical U fibers,
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and that makes it a distinction from
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metachromatic leukodystrophy,
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which you recall, I was saying,
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has a more central involvement.
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This is due to that deficiency of
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N-acetylaspartylase enzyme that is
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required for normal white
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matter development.
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This is a patient who has that
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entity of Canavan's disease.
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And let's distinguish it from
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metachromatic leukodystrophy.
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Here we have an old CT,
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we have the MRI scan,
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and as opposed to metachromatic
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leukodystrophy,
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we see that the white matter changes
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go all the way out to the periphery.
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This is our cortex. So this is.
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Involvement of the subcortical U fibers
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with Canavan's disease.
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You notice also that the head
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seems a little bit larger,
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and that's not just due to magnification.
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The patients have macrocephaly,
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which is also seen in Alexander's disease.
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As I mentioned,
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the diagnosis of Canavan's disease can
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be made with the combination of MR
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Spectroscopy. So Canavan's disease,
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we see again the involvement out to the
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periphery of the white matter
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in this patient
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with involvement of the
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subcortical U fibers.
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But what we're also seeing here is
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this large spike in the NAA.
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Here we have creatinine and choline
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peaks over here at three and 3.2.
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But this very high spike in the NAA is due
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to accumulation of N-acetyl aspartate,
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because it's not being broken down by
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that enzyme, N-acetylaspartylase,
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that should be occurring in the
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development of normal white matter.
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Characteristic feature
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of Canavan's disease,
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along with the subcortical
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U fiber involvement.
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This is a credit to Peter Barker,
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who's the head of our MR
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Spectroscopies team.
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Alexander's disease is the other of the
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white matter dysmyelinating disorders
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that has enlargement of the
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head and macrocephaly,
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but with the frontal predilection.
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And this is also known as fibrinoid
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leukodystrophy.
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It too involves the U fibers.
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Contrast that with this entity.
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In this case,
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we have a posterior predilection for
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the white matter dysmyelination.
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So here you see white matter involvement
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of the posterior parietal
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and occipital lobe.
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You can see also the involvement of the
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splenium here with abnormal signal
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intensity and anointing effect.
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On the Flare scan,
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we actually see involvement to the
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thalamus in the lateral geniculate body.
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The lateral geniculate body is part of the
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thalamus that is associated with
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the visual apparatus. So,
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as you could imagine,
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with a person who has an occipital
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and parietal lobe involvement,
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as well as lateral geniculate involvement,
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the clinical symptoms are usually
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a visual disturbance,
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and this is the entity of
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adrenoleukodystrophy.
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So adrenal leukodystrophy is characterized
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by the posterior predilection,
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the involvement of the lateral geniculate,
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the extent to the subcortical U fibers,
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not quite as severe as what we saw with,
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for example, the Canavan's case,
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but it does go out more peripherally than
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what one would expect with
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metachromatic leukodystrophy.
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A dystrophy with adrenal leukodystrophy.
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There is another characteristic feature
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and that is contrast enhancement of the
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leading edge of the dysmyelination.
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So here we have a T2-weighted scan showing
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the occipital lobe demyelinating
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dysmyelinating process with on
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post-gadolinium T1-weighted scan enhancement
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along the leading edge of
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the dysmyelination.
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So we don't see it in the central
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aspect of the dysmyelination,
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but along the periphery of the
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dysmyelination where you have white matter
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breakdown and breakdown of
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the blood-brain barrier.
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This enhancement in a dysmyelinating
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disorder is very uncommon except
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in adrenoleukodystrophy.
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Adrenoleukodystrophy is secondary to acyl
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CoA synthetase deficiency
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where you have no very
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long-chain fatty acid breakdown.
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Adrenal leukodystrophy was popularized in
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the movie entitled Lorenzo's Oil and this
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describes the patients with adrenal
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leukodystrophy treated by Hugo Moser,
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who is a physician at Johns Hopkins School
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of Medicine, recently passed,
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but used to work at the Kennedy
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Krieger Institute.
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And Hugo Moser was the person who
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developed the diet that was sparing the
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long-chain fatty acid diet for patients
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who had adrenoleukodystrophy and it
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miraculously led to improvement
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in the patient's symptoms.
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I shouldn't mention that the adrenal of
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adrenal leukody is that these patients
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typically have adrenal gland abnormalities
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and hypoadrenalism in association with the
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visual disturbance that's also associated
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with adrenoleukody by virtue of the
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occipital involvement. So again,
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adrenoleukodystrophy treated
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with Lorenzo's oil,
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which is the
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dietary manipulation advocated by Hugo
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Moser for resolution of the symptoms or
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improvement of the symptoms in patients
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who have adrenoleukodystrophy. On Mr.
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Spectroscopy,
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the adrenoleukodystrophy shows the
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breakdown of the white matter demonstrated
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by a decrease in the
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and the choline secondary to
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the white matter breakdown.
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As the patients are treated with
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the dietary manipulation,
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you find a return of the NAA to a more
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normal height with the improvement
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in the patient's symptoms.
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