Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Laser, this is an 80-year-old female.
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She's got severe numbness,
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balance disturbance, dizziness,
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numbness, speech disturbance, and hearing loss.
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And a partridge in a pear tree.
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And it's no wonder she's got multiple things going on.
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And one of our tasks here is to sort
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of define vascular dementia.
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And a second key teaching point is to tease out the
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different components that might be
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contributing to her symptoms.
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And the third point is to pick out any incidental
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findings that may or may not be contributory.
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So, I'd like to start out by just saying
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what we have up here.
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We've got an axial T2 paired on the right.
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We've got a susceptibility weighted image that's going to
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bring out the appearance of iron and blood and siderosis.
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In the middle, we've got a sagittal FLAIR,
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which demonstrates obvious confluent
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white matter hyperintensity.
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So, I'd like to start out
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by just defining some vascular dementias.
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We said that was going to be one of our jobs,
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one of our goals in this vignette,
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hypertension with siderosis.
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We do not have siderosis over here, so that one's out.
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Hypertension with État criblé lacunaire
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or dilated perivascular spaces.
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We do have some of those in the pontine perforators,
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and we have pontine gliosis.
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So the brain stem is affected,
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but the usual loci of extensive stippled Virchow-Robin
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or perivascular space hyperintensity is not present.
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And sometimes, those can get really weird.
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When they're around the temporal region,
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I've seen them very cystic,
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and it's these perivascular spaces that can have
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FLAIR hyperintensity around the outside.
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The rest of them do not.
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Then we've got amyloid,
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where we've got peripheral low bar
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and/or microhemorrhages with infarcts.
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This patient doesn't have that on the SWI or Swan,
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or BSI image.
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Then you've got small vessel disease,
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subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy,
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which consists of deep confluent periventricular white
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matter signal without peripheral macro infarction.
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And you can use the physique of scales we've discussed
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before to gauge the white matter disease present.
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And that fits very well here.
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Then we've got the entity known as CADASIL,
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which looks identical to SAE, but is hereditary.
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Seen in men a little more than women,
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associated with headache, patients a little old for it,
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and the white matter disease is not
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as confluent as we would see here.
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And then we've got classic multi-infarct dementia,
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in which I'm really looking for wedge-shaped infarctions,
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you know, macro-infarctions,
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in association with small vessel disease.
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We don't have that here.
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So I differentiate the Binswanger pure small
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vessel variety, which we have here,
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from the medium to large vessel variety,
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which is multi-infarct dementia,
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where you have multiple infarcts, various ages,
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various territories.
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Then finally, we've got vasculitis,
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which wouldn't fit here.
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We've got vasculocerebrotic inflammation
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that may or may not diffusion restrict,
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usually does not and is associated with severe
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headache and some other symptomatology and probably
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wouldn't apply in this 80-year-old,
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even though the symptoms were rather complex.
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Now, we also said that we would define other findings.
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And here we've got a meningioma anteriorly.
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I don't think that plays much of a role in this case,
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so we'll ignore it for now.
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We can see it in the sagittal projection.
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This one has gone into the calvarium.
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It's very dense, thick-looking, intermediate signal,
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bland-looking.
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And we've also got another interesting incidental finding,
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which is an empty sella.
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And the only thing that might play into dementia with this
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incidental finding is sometimes you can get
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older individuals who are under stress,
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that are low in cortisol or low in thyroid
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hormone as a result of this,
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and this can compound and complicate their dementia.
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So now, I want to go on to the third major point that we
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want to make, which is, what's this patient have?
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How many types of dementia are there present?
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And knowing that this patient, by history,
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has Parkinson's disease,
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which is the dominant or codominant dementia contributing
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to these symptoms, and we'll do that in the next vignette.
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Shall we?
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Let's do it.
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All right, Pomeranz and Laser out.
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