Interactive Transcript
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This was a young woman who was in a motor vehicle collision
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and presented with neck pain and headache
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after the motor vehicle collision,
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patient had a brief episode of loss of consciousness.
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The initial CT scan, as I show it, is unremarkable.
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No evidence of hemorrhage, no evidence of hydrocephalus,
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no evidence of extra-axial collections.
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And since we are focused right now on dissections and clots,
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we look at the intracranial vessels and we don't
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see any hyperdense vessels in the brain.
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The patient had bone windows which were also negative
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because of the patient's neck pain.
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The patient also had a cervical spine CT scan at
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the same setting and this too was negative.
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Shortly thereafter,
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the patient developed some element of dysmetria apparent on
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physical examination during the time
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within the emergency room visit.
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Because of the new neurologic symptoms and
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the persistence of left-sided neck pain,
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the patient had an MRI scan as well as an MRA of the neck.
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So let's look at that next.
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This is the flare scan of the patient's brain and
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on initial view of it, it looked pretty good.
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However, as you can see, in the posterior fossa,
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one has a small area of high signal intensity seen
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in the posterior portion of the cerebellum.
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And in the inferior lateral left side of the cerebellum,
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there seems to be an area of hyperintensity.
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On flare imaging,
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the diffusion-weighted scan was next
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performed and as you can see,
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there is a small area of high signal intensity in the
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lateral aspect of the left side of the cerebellum.
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Now,
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this is an area where one has susceptibility artifact
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at the air-bone interface and brain-bone interface.
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So this hyperintensity around the periphery
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of the cerebellum is normal.
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However,
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this was a more focal area of high signal intensity that was
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worrisome for potential early stroke and was also
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seen on the flare imaging.
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For this reason,
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the patient proceeded to MRA of
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the neck as well as the brain.
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I'm going to show the maximum intensity projection
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images from the left side of the vasculature.
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This is the internal carotid artery on the left side
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arising from the aorta. And as you can see,
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the bifurcation looks good and there
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are no dramatic areas of contour.
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Or luminal abnormality. However,
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within the left vertebral artery.
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To identify this,
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you see the left subclavian artery and the
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origin of the left vertebral artery.
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The left vertebral artery as one ascends one comes to
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this area of marked dilatation of the blood vessel,
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a pseudoaneurysm and distal to the pseudoaneurysm you
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can see that there is an area of vascular narrowing.
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Let me see whether I can magnify this a
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little bit for you all.
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There we go.
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So pseudoaneurysm with distal area of narrowing and in
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point of fact proximal to the pseudoaneurysm
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you see a small area of narrowing as well.
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And this is from
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the MRA of the neck.
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One thing that I will recommend when looking for dissected
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blood vessels you should do a spin echo fat-suppressed
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T1-weighted scan to look for clots in the vessel.
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Remember that high signal intensity clot will be obscured by
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adjacent fat if you do not apply a fat suppression
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technique in order to see clots in the vessel.
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On Spin-echo imaging.
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What I generally like to do with my cases in which I'm
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concerned about dissection is take the raw data here from
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the Gadolinium-enhanced MRA and create a multiplanar
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reconstruction in the axial plane.
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And that way you can see the blood vessel in cross-section
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in order to define whether or not there is clot in the
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wall or whether there is a focal area of dilatation.
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As you can see in this case,
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we have a dramatic change in the caliber of the blood vessel
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on cross-sectional imaging representing the pseudoaneurysm.
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So as I said previously,
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dissections and pseudoaneurysms of blood vessels are much
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more common in the neck after trauma than intracranially.
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And this is a good example of a vertebral artery dissection
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defined by the narrowing of the blood vessel proximal
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and distal to an area of pseudoaneurysm.
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Why do I say pseudoaneurysm?
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This is because the wall of the blood
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vessel has been traumatized.
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This, depending on whether or not the patient is having neurologic
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symptoms or demonstrating that this
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is a source of thromboembolism.
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The patients may be treated either conservatively with
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medical management or if the patient is
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throwing clots and having strokes,
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more likely the patient will be treated with stenting.
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