Interactive Transcript
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Now, I'm going to show you a case of a patient
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who had malignant collaterals.
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These are images of an 80-year-old female
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who had acute left hemiparesis.
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She was status post thoracic surgery with
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new onset of atrial fibrillation.
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These are imaged at approximately 2 hours.
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And on our non-contrast CT,
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we can see the hyperdense vessel sign
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in the right MCA,
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and
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we can already see some early loss of grey-white
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differentiation in the right temporal lobe,
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the right basal ganglia,
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right frontal lobe, right parietal.
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If you look, compared to the contralateral side,
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you can see that nice hyperdense cortex.
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I don't see that.
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There are areas where you just can't see that
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on the right side.
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So, it already looks like a pretty big infarct.
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But it was very early,
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and I don't think it was initially
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recognized how much loss of grey-white differentiation
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there was on the original CT.
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And the patient had other favorable
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clinical factors.
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So, they eventually took her to thrombolysis.
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But in any case,
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let me show you the rest of this case.
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So, that's the non-contrast CT.
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We're going to get our CTA.
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We're going to look at the intracranial MIPS.
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We knew there was going to be an MCA stem clot
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because we just saw the hyperdense vessel sign
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and because of the symptoms,
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and you can see that there's cut off.
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There are malignant collaterals.
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I really see hardly any collaterals.
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You can see nice left MCA looks normal.
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The bilateral PCAs look normal.
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And we'll take a look at the raw data.
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So, let's look at the raw data.
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So, we're going to look at...
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the arch has a little bit of calcification in it,
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not too much.
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We're just going to follow this right carotid up,
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and we get to the bifurcation,
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and there's some mild disease,
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relatively mild,
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maybe mild to moderate stenosis.
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Not that exciting.
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So, we're thinking it's probably
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not the atheromatous disease.
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It probably is the AFib that caused her stroke.
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We'll follow that vessel up.
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And again, some mild stenosis
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in the carotid siphon, and there's the cutoff.
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And we're going to look at the collaterals.
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And again,
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you see hardly any collaterals going up
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over the convexity.
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And then again, the CTA source images.
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So now, it's a little bit easier to see this
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extent of area where there's poor perfusion,
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loss of grey-white differentiation throughout
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the right MCA territory.
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But you do see good vessels on the left side,
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so compare it with the left side.
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So, non-contrast CT looked like the infarct
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is going to be pretty big.
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CTA source images increase
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the conspicuity of the infarct.
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Again, that may tend to overestimate
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the size of the infarct,
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but it increases the conspicuity of ischemia.
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So, this patient went to thrombolysis.
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Here is the DWI,
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and this shows pretty big infarct
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involving the insula,
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the right anterior and posterior temporal lobes,
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inferior frontal lobe, inferior parietal lobe,
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right basal ganglia,
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and then frontal and parietal cortex.
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So, even though she came in really early,
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got thrombolysed early,
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it was near complete opening of the vessels,
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still had a big infarct because
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she had malignant collaterals,
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and the infarct grew very quickly.
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And also,
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I just want to show you the FLAIR images.
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In early infarcts,
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patients usually don't have
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much FLAIR hyperintensity.
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But in these cases where they
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have malignant collaterals,
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they have early breakdown of
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the blood brain barrier,
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and sometimes they have FLAIR hyperintensity
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pretty early on.
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So in any case,
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that's our case of malignant collaterals.
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