Interactive Transcript
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I did want to show you the spinal imaging of
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the patient with intracranial hypotension.
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This is the same patient. You see the herniation of
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the cerebellar tonsil and the cerebellum downward
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through the foramen magnum in a pattern that
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was thought to represent Chiari I malformation,
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with a decompression having been performed.
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However, this patient's problem
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was intracranial hypotension.
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This herniation of the cerebellar tonsils led
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to development of a cervical cord syrinx because
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of the obstruction at the foramen magnum.
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The other imaging features that you can
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see on this sagittal T2-weighted scan is
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reduction in the mamillopontine distance.
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And that number I'm, I'm gonna have to
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quote you, I think is 12 millimeters.
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And in this patient it was six millimeters.
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Here is the syrinx that had occurred secondary
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to the tonsil herniation, obstructing CSF flow.
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For patients who have intracranial hypotension, you
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wanna look into the neuroforamina and see whether there
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are nerve root sleeve cysts that may be enlarged or
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have ruptured or other sources of CSF leakage in the
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dura, which may occur post-op after spine surgery.
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In this case, we did not see
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anything in the cervical spine.
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We did the axial scans.
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Again, what is this tissue down here?
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This is the temporal lobe
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herniating downward across the tentorium to the level
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of the pons and even to the internal auditory canal.
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It's outrageous.
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Patient has herniation of temporal lobe.
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Here is the syrinx, the old syrinx.
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However, when we went ahead and continued
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to scan down into the thoracic spine,
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and looked in a parasagittal location,
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we found an area where the neural foramen was enlarged
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and there was a big cyst in this neural foramen.
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This ends up being the T9-10 level.
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You can see contralateral side, not bad.
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Let's look at the axial scans.
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Axial scans still have that abnormal signal
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in the spinal cord from the previous syrinx.
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As we come down even further on T2-weighted imaging, you see this big cyst.
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This cyst was the source of the leakage of
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cerebrospinal fluid, leading to decreased
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pressure intracranially, and that appearance of
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a Chiari I malformation, which was actually
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not from Chiari I malformation,
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but from intracranial hypotension.
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How do we know that this is the source of the leakage?
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This patient underwent CSF aspiration and then
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obliteration of this cyst with a fibrin clot,
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and with the obliteration of the cyst,
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the patient's headache went away, and the findings
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intracranially with respect to the dural enhancement
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improved.
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The whole sagging thing didn't improve
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automatically, but the first thing we saw was the
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absence of the dural enhancement in the patient.
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Tarlov cysts in the sacrum region may also
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be a source of loss of pressure of the CSF,
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and that may be another, uh, etiology for
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intracranial hypotension. As I mentioned,
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pseudo meningocele associated with previous surgery
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may also be a source of the loss of the normal
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regulatory intracranial, uh, pressure in the intraspinal
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canal, which can lead to the intracranial hypotension.
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Now, if you have a patient who has postural
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headaches after a simple lumbar puncture
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or myelogram, what we usually do will be an
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epidural blood, uh, an epidural blood patch.
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Which we inject usually in the lumbar region,
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and that will seal the hole from your lumbar
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puncture and lead to correction of the patient's
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headache, and they usually feel better almost
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immediately after you do the epidural blood patch.
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In this case, this was not obviously
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associated with any intervention by physicians.
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This was a nerve root sleeve cyst that had perforated
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and was leaking CSF, resulting in this patient
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presenting with intracranial hypotension, which was
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misdiagnosed initially as a Chiari I malformation.
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