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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
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Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
34 topics, 1 hr. 48 min.
Extradural Spine Lesions
7 m.Degenerative Spondylomyelopathy
3 m.Traumatic Lesions of the Spine
6 m.Subdural Hematoma of the Spine
2 m.Epidural Hematoma of the Spine
2 m.Post-operative Hematoma
4 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis of the Spine
5 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis with Epidural Phlegmon/Abscess
4 m.Tuberculous Spondylitis
5 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis with Prevertebral Abscess
2 m.Discitis Osteomyelitis with Anterior Epidural Phlegmon
3 m.Epidural Abscess from Facet Joint Infectious Synovitis
4 m.Paraspinal Abscess with Epidural Extension
3 m.Summary of Extradural Neoplasms
4 m.Lumbar Spine Schwannoma Extending into the Neural Foramen
2 m.Primary Osseous Extradural Neoplasms
8 m.Osteochondroma of the Spine
3 m.Extradural Metastatic Disease
4 m.Chondrosarcoma of the Spine
4 m.Metastatic Disease vs. Multiple Myeloma
3 m.Malignant versus Benign Compression Fractures
7 m.Extramedullary Hematopoiesis of the Epidural Space
3 m.Paraspinal Extramedullary Hematopoiesis
2 m.Multifocal Epidural Extramedullary Hematopoiesis
4 m.Epidural Lipomatosis
3 m.Extradural Congenital Lesions
6 m.Epidermoid Cyst of the Thoracic Spine
3 m.Spinal Congenital Anomalies: Myelomeningoceles
6 m.Cervicothoracic Myelomeningocele
3 m.Recurrent Myelomeningocele and Cord Tethering After Repair
2 m.Diastematomyelia
3 m.Diastematomyelia
3 m.Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy
3 m.Extradural Processes – Conclusion
3 m.0:01
Next to neurenteric cysts,
0:03
I find diastematomyelia as one of my favorite spinal lesions.
0:09
This is,
0:09
again a congenital lesion in which the spinal cord is
0:14
separated into two components. These are hemicords,
0:18
if you will, that are within one enlarged thecal sac,
0:23
and these hemicords will recombine
0:26
lower down in the lumbar region.
0:30
The thing that separates the two halves of the cord
0:34
is most commonly fibrous tissue.
0:36
However,
0:36
it can occasionally be secondary to bone in between the two
0:40
hemicords. This is to be distinguished from diplomyelia.
0:46
With diplomyelia,
0:47
you have two separate spinal cords that are duplicated,
0:51
and each of those spinal cords has two sets of
0:54
nerve roots going to the right and to the left.
0:56
With diastematomyelia , you have a split core.
1:00
But each of the hemicords only has one side nerve roots.
1:04
So the left side obviously would have the left nerve roots,
1:07
and the right side would have the right nerve roots.
1:09
Here is an MRI scan showing a patient who has
1:12
diastematomyelia. When we look at these T1-weighted scans,
1:17
we see that the cord appears to be split.
1:20
And what is splitting it is something that has
1:22
dark signal intensity on T1-weighted scan,
1:25
as well as bright signal intensity
1:26
on the T1-weighted scan.
1:28
This is in point affect bone marrow
1:30
fat as well as bone cortex,
1:34
which is separating the two hemicords of this patient
1:37
with diastematomyelia. As I mentioned, lower down,
1:42
when the separation is no longer present,
1:45
these two hemicords will recombine to a cord that looks a
1:49
little bit bizarre because it's got a more narrow central
1:52
portion here representing the two hemicords.
1:55
However, it does recombine, and the patient does have
2:00
intact nerve roots.
2:01
You'll notice that on this T1-weighted scan, that we have nerve
2:04
roots both anteriorly as well as posteriorly on both sides.
2:08
Diastematomyelia may be associated
2:11
with abnormalities with spina bifida,
2:15
a syrinx in the spinal cord above the separation,
2:20
and rarely will have myelomeningoceles,
2:23
as well as Arnold-Chiari malformation associated with it.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
Next to neurenteric cysts,
0:03
I find diastematomyelia as one of my favorite spinal lesions.
0:09
This is,
0:09
again a congenital lesion in which the spinal cord is
0:14
separated into two components. These are hemicords,
0:18
if you will, that are within one enlarged thecal sac,
0:23
and these hemicords will recombine
0:26
lower down in the lumbar region.
0:30
The thing that separates the two halves of the cord
0:34
is most commonly fibrous tissue.
0:36
However,
0:36
it can occasionally be secondary to bone in between the two
0:40
hemicords. This is to be distinguished from diplomyelia.
0:46
With diplomyelia,
0:47
you have two separate spinal cords that are duplicated,
0:51
and each of those spinal cords has two sets of
0:54
nerve roots going to the right and to the left.
0:56
With diastematomyelia , you have a split core.
1:00
But each of the hemicords only has one side nerve roots.
1:04
So the left side obviously would have the left nerve roots,
1:07
and the right side would have the right nerve roots.
1:09
Here is an MRI scan showing a patient who has
1:12
diastematomyelia. When we look at these T1-weighted scans,
1:17
we see that the cord appears to be split.
1:20
And what is splitting it is something that has
1:22
dark signal intensity on T1-weighted scan,
1:25
as well as bright signal intensity
1:26
on the T1-weighted scan.
1:28
This is in point affect bone marrow
1:30
fat as well as bone cortex,
1:34
which is separating the two hemicords of this patient
1:37
with diastematomyelia. As I mentioned, lower down,
1:42
when the separation is no longer present,
1:45
these two hemicords will recombine to a cord that looks a
1:49
little bit bizarre because it's got a more narrow central
1:52
portion here representing the two hemicords.
1:55
However, it does recombine, and the patient does have
2:00
intact nerve roots.
2:01
You'll notice that on this T1-weighted scan, that we have nerve
2:04
roots both anteriorly as well as posteriorly on both sides.
2:08
Diastematomyelia may be associated
2:11
with abnormalities with spina bifida,
2:15
a syrinx in the spinal cord above the separation,
2:20
and rarely will have myelomeningoceles,
2:23
as well as Arnold-Chiari malformation associated with it.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Spine
Neuroradiology
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
MRI
Congenital
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