Interactive Transcript
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This is a diagram of the progression of disease
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when one has an axonal shearing injury.
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The image on the far left is a normal example of the white
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matter tract with the foot processes on the cellular body in
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the normal state.
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However, when one has a shearing injury,
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you can see that there is disruption of that white matter.
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And not only that,
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you start to have that outpouring of the neurotransmitter
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that I mentioned, which is usually represented by glutamate.
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Initially, one might just have the white matter injury.
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However,
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over the course of time when there is a diffuse process,
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you start to have all of these glutamate injuries affecting
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the cellular body itself.
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And this is, as I said,
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cytotoxic when one has excessive glutamate.
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in the subarachnoid space.
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So the ultimate endpoint is cellular death by
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the outpouring of glutamate.
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As I mentioned,
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the use of susceptibility weight imaging
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for diffuse axonal injury is critical.
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There was the concept in the past about an entity known as
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non-hemorrhagic shearing injury, and that was because we did
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not have that acute sensitivity to blood products by SWI.
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So this is a gradient echo scan,
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and you may detect some
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high signal intensity in the white matter.
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of this gradient echo scan,
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but you certainly wouldn't suggest that the patient has
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had a hemorrhagic injury.
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This is the same patient.
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And again, this is from 2005 when SWI first came out.
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And you'll notice now that there are
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multiple areas of hemorrhage.
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So the concept of non-hemorrhagic shearing injury has been
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rebuffed by the advent of utilization of susceptibility
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weighted imaging in the brain tissue.
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So at these gray-white junctions,
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you have hemorrhagic injury to the brain.
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This is demonstrated also diagrammatically by the cellular
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bodies and the white matter tracks here,
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and by the presence of all of these little
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injuries to the white matter.
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And then there is often dying back of various amounts of the
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cells who have had their white matter tracks sheared off.
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So when we talk about diffuse axonal injury,
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or traumatic axonal injury, or shearing injuries,
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or acceleration deceleration rotational injury,
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what we have is this shear strain deformation that tears the
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white matter and usually results in what's
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called axonal traction balls,
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where the cellular cells will swell up and ultimately die.
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And the location that we usually look for these
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are at these three critical regions.
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The gray-white matter junction,
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and that's usually in the high frontal and parietal region,
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the corpus callosum,
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and particularly in the splenium of the corpus callosum,
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where the only indicator may be a small amount of
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intraventricular hemorrhage.
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And as I said,
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along the dorsolateral midbrain where it approaches
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and bangs up against the tentorial edge.
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This is a very poor prognostic finding to
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have any of these findings in the brain.
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This is a fast spin echo T2-weighted scan and a gradient
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echo scan in a patient who had diffuse axonal injury.
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You can see that the patient has areas of hemorrhage
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that are evident on the fast spin echo scan,
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but much more demonstration of blood
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products on the gradient echo scan.
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This patient demonstrates two out of the three zones of
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hemorrhagic diffuse axonal injury, in that you have it
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at the gray-white junction of the frontal lobes,
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as well as portions of the parietal lobe,
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as well as an injury to the splenium of the corpus callosum.
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The third location where one would have
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an injury would be in the midbrain.
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And as you recall,
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the posterior portion of the midbrain,
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as it hits the tentorial edge,
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is the final and third location for
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classic diffuse axonal injury to the brain.
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