Interactive Transcript
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This is a 56-year-old man with proven classic PD,
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although it didn't start out that way.
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It started out with him complaining of
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gastrointestinal discomfort for over 15 months.
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You might think PD, gastrointestinal discomfort.
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Well, one of the hallmark features of Parkinson's disease
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is diminished autonomic function.
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So, I've seen patients present
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with postural hypotension.
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I've seen patients present with a volvulus,
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a sequel volvulus from loss of
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contraction of the colon.
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And I've seen people present with bacterial
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overgrowth due to loss of contraction of the colon.
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So decreased colonic inertia,
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which was this patient's initial symptom,
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which led to a brain MRI.
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He had a father that died of
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multi-infarct disease.
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And so when we looked at his FLAIR image
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and saw all these innumerable white
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spots in a 56-year-old,
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we thought that perhaps a vascular etiology
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was his underlying problem.
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And he was placed on aggressive medication to
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lower his elevated cholesterol
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and bring his LDL below 100,
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which would be the typical hallmark therapy.
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I allow, whether there's cognitive decline or not,
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I allow one gliotic area per decade.
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So if you're 60, I'll allow six.
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Now, a lot of this is dependent upon your culture.
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In Japan,
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where they eat a lot of fish and drink a lot of
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tea and have other habits that are
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somewhat more healthy than ours,
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they have a much lower incidence of gliotic
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spots per decade than we do.
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But this gentleman has way too many.
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He has almost a hundred of them.
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But that wouldn't explain the symptoms
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which were overlooked for so long,
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diminished colonic inertia,
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and then on physical examination by a very
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sharp clinician, rigidity was detected,
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along with decrease in facial muscular tone.
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So this is an individual that has had Parkinson's
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symptoms for almost 24 months
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at the time of this MR examination.
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We've got an axial T2 on the left,
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a FLAIR in the middle,
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and a portion of an echo-planar study,
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which is susceptibility sensitive and shows you
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the substantia nigra
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and the red nucleus to advantage.
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Now, even though we do see a brighter compacta zone
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between the substantia nigra
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and the nucleus ruber,
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and perhaps they're a little close together here.
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Remember, he's very early on in his disease,
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but what we do see is look at how blunted the
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substantia nigra is on the FLAIR
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and on the susceptibility-sensitive
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echo-planar image.
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It just comes to a screeching halt,
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and we've completely lost the
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little wispy, lateral swallowtail component
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along the lateral aspect of the substantia nigra.
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So, loss of the swallowtail sign was an event
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or a demonstration of Parkinson's
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on an MRI in this patient.
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Patient did not have any symptoms of dementia, whatsoever.
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And unlike comparison cases,
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which you'll find in our series on MRI online,
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look at the robust appearance of his temporal lobe.
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His superior temporal lobe looks absolutely terrific.
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It's robust,
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which is what you would expect
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in somebody with early PD.
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So, if they have symptoms for two or three
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or four years,
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and you see loss of the anterior two thirds
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of the superior temporal gyrus,
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odds are you're dealing with another disease process
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such as Lewy Body Dementia or LBD.
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A tip off to that diagnosis.
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Let's move on, shall we?
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