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Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
Training Collections
Library Memberships
On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Continuing Medical Education (State CME)
Complete all of your state CME requirements in one convenient place.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
Case of the Week (Free)
Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Case Crunch: Rapid Case Review (Free)
Register for free live board reviews.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
1 topic, 2 min.
30 topics, 1 hr. 9 min.
Congenital Supratentorial Malformations Introduction
1 m.Perisylvian Polymicrogyria
3 m.Polymicrogyria
2 m.Polymicrogyria Acquired from Infection
3 m.Lissencephaly with band type Heterotopia – Severe
4 m.Lissencephaly – Posterior Involvement
4 m.Lissencephaly with Agyric Pattern
3 m.Lissencephaly, Inuetero
3 m.Lissencephaly – Lacking band type Heterotopia
2 m.Alobar Holoprosencephaly
3 m.Semilobar Holoprosencephaly
3 m.Mild Lobar Holoprosencephaly
3 m.Syntelencephaly
2 m.Septo-optic Dysplasia (SOD)
3 m.Septo-optic Dysplasia (SOD), Schizencephalic Cleft
2 m.Septo-optic Dysplasia, Ectopic Neurohypophysis
3 m.Septo-optic Dysplasia, Scizencephalic Cleft – Mild
2 m.Schizencephaly
2 m.Bilateral Schizencephaly
3 m.Subcortical Heterotopia
2 m.Focal Heterotopia
3 m.Band Type Heterotopia
2 m.Agenesis of the Corpus Callosum
3 m.Agenesis of the Corpus Callosum, Cyst
3 m.Callosal Dysgenesis
4 m.Complete Callosal Dysgenesis
3 m.Middle Fossa Arachnoid Cyst
4 m.Hemimegalencephaly
6 m.Corpus Callosum Lipoma
2 m.Tectal Plate Lipoma
3 m.0:01
This is an MRI in a 10-year- old child with headache.
0:05
And we see an abnormality.
0:07
We see an area of bright signal in the posterior
0:09
aspect of the interhemispheric fissure.
0:11
And on the sagittal T1 weighted image,
0:13
we see along the superior aspect
0:15
of the corpus callosum,
0:16
an area that is bright with adjacent
0:19
hypointense signal.
0:21
This sagittal T1-weighted image is performed
0:23
with a gradient technique.
0:25
One of the things you can do is actually use a
0:27
regular spin echo technique and some of this
0:31
susceptibility artifact along
0:32
the edge goes away.
0:34
And you can see this curvilinear area
0:37
of T1 shortening
0:38
bright signal that goes along the
0:41
superior margin of the corpus callosum.
0:44
You can see the normal portions
0:46
of the corpus callosum.
0:47
There's the rostrum,
0:49
the genu,
0:50
the body,
0:51
the isthmus and the splenium
0:53
of the corpus callosum.
0:55
The lipoma follows all the way from the anterior body
1:00
over the isthmus and splenium
1:02
and hooks around the splenium.
1:04
This is likely a lipoma of the corpus callosum.
1:08
But to confirm what it is,
1:11
we use fat-suppressed imaging
1:13
where we keep all other parameters identical.
1:17
And we see that this bright signal
1:19
on T1 weighted imaging goes away.
1:21
This confirms that it's a lipoma,
1:23
that it's just fat.
1:24
An intracranial lipoma is often in the midline
1:27
along the superior margin of the corpus callosum
1:29
is one of the most common places.
1:32
It's considered to be an incidental finding.
1:35
One thing to be aware of,
1:36
as we saw on that gradient T1 weighted image,
1:38
and also on the susceptibility-weighted image,
1:40
you often see susceptibility hypointensity
1:43
along the margins of the colossal lipoma.
1:45
That can be totally normal and that should not
1:48
dissuade you from this being the diagnosis.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
This is an MRI in a 10-year- old child with headache.
0:05
And we see an abnormality.
0:07
We see an area of bright signal in the posterior
0:09
aspect of the interhemispheric fissure.
0:11
And on the sagittal T1 weighted image,
0:13
we see along the superior aspect
0:15
of the corpus callosum,
0:16
an area that is bright with adjacent
0:19
hypointense signal.
0:21
This sagittal T1-weighted image is performed
0:23
with a gradient technique.
0:25
One of the things you can do is actually use a
0:27
regular spin echo technique and some of this
0:31
susceptibility artifact along
0:32
the edge goes away.
0:34
And you can see this curvilinear area
0:37
of T1 shortening
0:38
bright signal that goes along the
0:41
superior margin of the corpus callosum.
0:44
You can see the normal portions
0:46
of the corpus callosum.
0:47
There's the rostrum,
0:49
the genu,
0:50
the body,
0:51
the isthmus and the splenium
0:53
of the corpus callosum.
0:55
The lipoma follows all the way from the anterior body
1:00
over the isthmus and splenium
1:02
and hooks around the splenium.
1:04
This is likely a lipoma of the corpus callosum.
1:08
But to confirm what it is,
1:11
we use fat-suppressed imaging
1:13
where we keep all other parameters identical.
1:17
And we see that this bright signal
1:19
on T1 weighted imaging goes away.
1:21
This confirms that it's a lipoma,
1:23
that it's just fat.
1:24
An intracranial lipoma is often in the midline
1:27
along the superior margin of the corpus callosum
1:29
is one of the most common places.
1:32
It's considered to be an incidental finding.
1:35
One thing to be aware of,
1:36
as we saw on that gradient T1 weighted image,
1:38
and also on the susceptibility-weighted image,
1:40
you often see susceptibility hypointensity
1:43
along the margins of the colossal lipoma.
1:45
That can be totally normal and that should not
1:48
dissuade you from this being the diagnosis.
Report
Description
Faculty
Asim F Choudhri, MD
Chief, Pediatric Neuroradiology
Le Bonheur Children's Hospital
Tags
Pediatrics
Neuroradiology
MRI
Congenital
Brain
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