Interactive Transcript
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This patient was being evaluated
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for a cervical myelopathy.
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As we scroll through the T1-weighted
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and T2-weighted scans,
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we're looking at the degree of canal
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compromise to see whether there is cord
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compression or abnormal signal intensity
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in the spinal cord, given that the patient has a myelopathy.
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Frankly, in looking at this,
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I don't see anything that looks that
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bad. When we look on the sagittal scan,
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there seems to be a large disc
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herniation at the C3-C4 level.
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So we go to our gradient echo scan,
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which is our sequence that is the best for identifying
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disc herniations. Here at the...
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I believe this is the C2 level.
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Yeah. So we're at the C2 level.
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We see this large area of signal intensity abnormality,
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which is not bright on the gradient echo scan.
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Here's the gradient echo scan where you
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have high signal intensity.
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This is actually at the C3-C4 level where
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we have that large disc herniation.
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But at the C2-C3 level,
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it's not bright. It's actually dark.
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So we'd probably say that there's
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osteophyte present at C2-C3 with a disc
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herniation at C3-C4 extending to the
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right side greater than the left,
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with likely compression of the C4 nerve root.
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Now, remember that the cervical spine
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has eight cervical nerve roots.
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So at the L4-L5 foramen, what's going
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through the foramen at L4-L5 is the L4 nerve root.
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But at the C4-C5 foramen, it's the C5 nerve root.
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So C8 goes through C7-T1.
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So it's the lower nerve root number that
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is going through the foramen.
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So, here at the C3-C4 level,
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it's the C4 nerve root that's getting
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compressed by this soft tissue to the right of midline.
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And it looks predominant like disc herniation.
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And then as we scroll through the
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remainder of the cervical spine,
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we don't see all that much.
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Well, this is just a little warning to tell
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you that there is a role yet
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for cervical spine CT.
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Let me demonstrate that by showing
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you what the cervical
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spine CT looks like.
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Here we have the cervical spine CT.
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And look at what we missed.
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Here behind each of the vertebral bodies
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is ossification of the posterior
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longitudinal ligament, which is not readily evident.
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Let's just take C4.
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So here's C2, C3,
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C4 looks pretty good.
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But when we look at the CT scan, C2, C3, C4.
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This tissue, this bone tissue that is
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along that posterior margin of the vertebra
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is ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament.
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It's present at C5.
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It's present at C6.
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Okay, not so much.
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A little bit at C7.
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And at the C1, C2, C3 level,
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all of this is OPLL.
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It's actually...
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and look at this big raft of it here.
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It's not really disc material.
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So, this is a word to the wise.
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When you are looking at patients who show
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demonstration of narrowing
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of the spinal canal, but the etiology of it is not
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as clear on the MRI scan,
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it may be that we're dealing with
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something that is bony,
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that is relatively invisible on the MRI,
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such as ossification of the posterior
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longitudinal ligament.
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You notice that this patient also has
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flowing osteophytes anteriorly.
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So as yet another example of a patient
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who has associated diffused idiopathic
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skeletal hyperostosis
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in association with
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OPLL.
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