Interactive Transcript
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So first, we're going to talk about Moyamoya disease.
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As I was saying,
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it can be primary and idiopathic,
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or it can be secondary in association
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with NF1, sickle cell disease,
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radiation and atherosclerosis.
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What you get is progressive stenosis of
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the distal internal carotid arteries,
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proximal MCAs and ACAs,
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with relative sparing of the posterior circulation.
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Children tend to present with ischemic lesions.
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Adults tend to present with basal ganglia hemorrhage,
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but either can present with either.
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What you notice on imaging is the severe stenosis,
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and then a lot of collateral vessels.
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So, these are images of a child who had
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progressive white matter lesions.
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And you can see these multiple
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white matter lesions,
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which turned out to be subcortical strokes.
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You can see this FLAIR hyperintensity
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throughout the sulci,
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which is slow flow and collateral vessels.
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Post contrast, those collaterals enhance.
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So again,
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you can see all these enhancing lesions in the
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subarachnoid spaces.
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And on CT angiography,
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you see severe attenuation of the distal
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ICA and the proximal ACAs and MCAs,
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and worse on the right.
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And then, you see all these tiny little collaterals
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which form when the vessels occlude.
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The posterior circulation is normal.
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I haven't really shown it here.
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And this is just a sagittal projection
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of an occluded ICA.
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And you can see all these collaterals.
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It's called a puff of smoke on angiogram.
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So, this case of moyamoya is a 48-year-old male
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with left-sided weakness and dysarthria.
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And this is the non-contrast CT.
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And what I notice here is some hypoattenuation
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in the top of the right basal ganglia
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and the right corona radiata
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and the right centrum semiovale.
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I don't see any hemorrhage.
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Don't really see a dense vessel sign.
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And that's pretty much the non-contrast CT.
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And then we got a CTA,
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and I quickly reviewed the images of the neck
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and see some mild,
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mild to moderate stenosis in the bilateral internal
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carotid arteries from some mild atheromatous disease,
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but don't see too much.
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The vertebral arteries look pretty good.
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And we can look at the sagittal images of the neck,
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and again, some mild,
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mild to moderate atheromatous disease
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at the carotid bifurcations bilaterally.
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And the vertebral arteries look pretty good.
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I don't see too much else there.
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So, let's look at the circle of Willis.
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So, the first thing I always do,
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I look at the MIP images,
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and you can see that posterior circulation is,
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there's some mild stenoses,
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but is relatively preserved.
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But the distal right ICA and proximal MCA
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and proximal ACA are not seen.
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They're likely occluded.
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And then, you can see some collateral vessels.
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And on the left side,
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you can see the A1 and A2,
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but looks like there's a tangle of collateral vessels,
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and then you kind of see an attenuated MCA.
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So already, I'm thinking of anterior circulation,
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abnormal ICAs and MCAs, and ACAs.
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This looks like a Moyamoya case.
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We can look at the coronal images, too.
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And again, on the right side,
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you see some collateral vessels.
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You don't really see the
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ACA and MCA well.
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On the left side,
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you can see the top of the ICA,
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a bunch of collaterals,
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and then you see an attenuated MCA.
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And then, the posterior circulation,
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the basilar artery,
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the PCAs are relatively preserved.
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So, this is a classic Moyamoya pattern.
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Let's take a look at the raw data.
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Again,
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neck.
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Just follow the left IC up.
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Some mild to moderate stenosis,
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has a little plaque,
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but we don't see enough plaque to think
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this is all due to atheromatous disease.
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The left ICA looks pretty good here.
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Going up into the siphon
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and up to the circle of Willis.
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And then, what happens here,
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this never connects up.
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There are...
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All these little collaterals,
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but it never really connects up to the MCA.
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So, these are all those collaterals
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you were seeing.
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And then, you've got some attenuated MCA branches.
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And then, the proximal ACA looks okay on the left.
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And then, we'll just go through the right side.
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And then the right side,
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you know,
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starting down here,
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the common carotid artery looks normal.
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The bifurcation,
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we see a little bit of atheromatous disease,
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but again,
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not enough to explain the
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circle Willis findings.
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The right ICA is attenuated,
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and then becomes very faint and is occluded in the siphon,
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all the way up to where you see these collateral vessels
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in the circle of Willis.
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And there is some collateralization
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of the more distal MCA branches.
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So, classic moyamoya,
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anterior circulation,
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progressive stenosis of the distal ICAs
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and proximal MCAs and ACAs.
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And let me just show you the MR.
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So, we've got a follow up MR.
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And as we suspected,
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there was involvement of the basal ganglia
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corona radiata.
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And you can see some lesions higher up that are
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in the border zone between the MCA and ACA.
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This is more MCA stem
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and a couple other lesions in the MCA territory.
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So, that's our case of Moyamoya.
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