Interactive Transcript
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Welcome to MRI online.
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Non-glial tumors.
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We're talking about extra-axial lesions.
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To start,
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I'm Dr. Stephen Pomeranz, neuroradiologist.
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A younger, better-looking, smarter version.
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Sitting next to me, Ben Laser, also a neuroradiologist,
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and we're starting out with this 76-year-old lady
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who's got a known mass.
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She could have
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although that wasn't part of the history.
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But we do have a lesion in the olfactory groove.
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And being a little smarter and a little younger,
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how would you evaluate this lesion at first glance?
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So, when looking at a case like this,
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the first thing that I tried to look at is,
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where is the lesion located?
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So the location of the lesion is paramount to finding
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out or giving a good differential or a diagnosis.
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So in this case, when you're looking at this lesion,
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is this lesion intra-axial or extra-axial?
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So there are several different signs that you can use to
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help make you determine or help you determine
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where this lesion is.
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So, for example,
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one of the...
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one of the best lesions...
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one of the best ways to determine
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if this is intra-axial or extra-axial
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is looking at the T2 image.
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One thing that you see is you see a mass with
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hyperintense T2 signal surrounding it.
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So, one of the signs is called the CSF cleft sign.
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And I think this lesion on the right panel
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demonstrates that...
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You think this is it?
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This bright, brightish area.
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So that would be the CSF cleft sign.
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The other thing that you can see on this same image is
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the cortex is actually buckled, so it's being pushed.
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So that gives you high suspicion or tells you that this
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lesion is extra-axial and not within the brain.
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So, you're talking the cortex of the parenchyma,
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not the cortex of the bone?
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Yes, the parenchymal cortex.
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Sure.
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And, you know,
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another thing that might be in this cleft,
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besides this sort of rim of CSF,
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sometimes you'll have a little vessels
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they may wrap around the lesion.
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Sometimes you'll be able to see a sort of
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a fibrous rim and a thick area of dura,
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which makes a dark interface with the adjacent cortex.
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And classically,
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the buckle sign was originally described with white matter
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that buckles around the lesion, but doesn't come 360 degrees
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around the lesion.
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So when you have cortical buckling,
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you also have white matter buckling.
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But you're right.
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The first thing that any resident radiologist fellow
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should do is decide,
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is this intra or extra-axial?
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And clearly this one is extra-axial.
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No doubt about it.
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So, we've got an extra-axial mass.
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Where would you put it?
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So, it's sitting actually on the floor of the anterior cranial fossa.
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It's right in the olfactory groove.
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So this would be considered an olfactory groove process or lesion.
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Right.
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And then as you go back,
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you run into structures like the anterior clinoids in front
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of the pituitary and the planum sphenoidale
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and limbus sphenoidalis,
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and then the olfactory groove.
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That's kind of the transition in here.
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And I'm not so much interested in you learning that anatomy,
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but it is an olfactory groove mass.
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It's extra-axial, and it has to be a meningioma, right?
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Mm-hmm.
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So, let's just briefly talk about,
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in the next section,
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the MR appearance of meningiomas.
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Now that we've established that this cleft sign is a sign
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of an extra-axial lesion.
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Let's move on, shall we?
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