Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Laser, this is a 61-year-old male,
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has an interesting history prior
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cerebellar meningioma, prostate cancer
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with radical prostatectomy previously performed,
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and I will say that prostate cancer is
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one of those cancers that is meningioma like.
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It's a pretty dense cancer.
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You kinda get that feel
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because you know that it's bony metastases
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are very packed and very sclerotic,
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and so there's some translation of that into the brain.
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So when you get brain mets, in my experience,
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yes, they can be calvarial and be
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sclerotic and low in signal,
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but I've seen them on multiple occasions
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along with colon,
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be dural-based
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and be very packed with very little cytoplasm
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so that they're kind of gray and they can mimic meningioma.
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Now in this case, we have a mass
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that's intimate with the sella in the suprasellar region,
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involves the anterior clinoid off to the side,
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involves the planum sphenoidale and limbus sphenoidalis,
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and the question is,
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is this juicy pituitary gland giving rise,
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making a baby out of this lesion?
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Giving birth to it and extruding it up out of the birth canal?
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Or is it a separate, you know,
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is it a separate lesion coming on down?
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I think the coronal projections are kind of tough, actually.
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When you look at it on the T2 coronal,
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it looks like a perfect mushroom, right?
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There's the pituitary gland
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and then you have a sort of snowman or mushroom effect,
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which is often described with pituitary macroadenoma.
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Look at the contrast-enhanced MRI.
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Very nice,
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almost perfectly midline mushroom.
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Your first instinct is to think, okay,
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it's pretty much...
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it's pretty enhancing,
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it's pretty intense, it's very smooth
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and it has that snowman-type effect.
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So your initial reaction,
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even with the vascular displacement
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and the carotid terminus widening side to side is,
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okay, pituitary adenoma.
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But you'd be wrong,
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and the reason you'd be wrong is
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it's got this very flat dural
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growth pattern,
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which is typical of these skull-base
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anterior cranial fossa,
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sphenoid ridge meningiomas.
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Let's pull down the axial T1.
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What does that conjure up in your mind?
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What diagnosis would you think of here?
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So that single image,
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all else being ignored,
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would raise the possibility of a craniopharyngioma.
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It looks like it's arising from the pituitary gland.
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It's heterogeneous, it's got patchy enhancement,
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soft tissue enhancement on each side of it,
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so that'd be the first thought
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looking at this single image.
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Sure, and I think that's a real fair assessment.
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And then when you get to the other planes
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and the enhancement.
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Very atypical for craniopharyngioma,
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which is kind of like popcorn.
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It's got a cholesterol,
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calcium, sometimes blood,
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some different epithelial elements,
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so it's a mishmash of tissues inside.
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It's kind of a schizophrenic
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lesion in terms of its behavior.
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And the fact that this thing is just flat out smooth,
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goes heavily against that diagnosis.
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Also, the growth pattern virtually excludes it.
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There is a biphasic distribution in kids and adults,
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so the age doesn't necessarily dissuade us from the diagnosis,
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but everything else does.
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So, even though the first thought for that cut
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would be craniopharyngioma,
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I think we could take that out of the equation.
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Another thing I found is that
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because meningiomas are so firm
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they tend to do a lot more pushing,
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so they'll press the carotid termini
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a little more readily side to side
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than the softer pituitary adenoma would do.
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So, this is a meningioma.
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It's a somewhat en plaque meningioma.
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The original locus of origin is either the anterior
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clinoid or the planum region,
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and I think those are the teaching points.
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Anything else you want to add?
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I think the most important thing for this case is to
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always look at your sagittal imaging
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because that's going to really help you define
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the lesion and to see the fat planes
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and to see the characteristic of the lesion.
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Great.
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And yeah, you do see a little plane
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between it
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and the pituitary gland, if you look really hard.
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One more blow-up image for you.
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And then, Pomeranz and Laser out for this case.
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There's the plane.
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We're out. Thank you.
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