Interactive Transcript
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This is a 77-year-old female who's got a visual problem.
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And there is a mass near the right orbital apex.
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We've got a T1 without contrast,
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T1 with contrast, all axial,
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and a T2 axial.
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Let's scroll up and down a little bit so that our viewing
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audience gets a feel for what we're looking at.
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Might not be a bad idea to pull up the coronal projection.
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And you can see a dural attachment,
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a flat dural attachment along the planum sphenoidale,
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and this is a more on plot growth pattern of
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meningioma involving portions of the sphenoid, but also,
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most importantly, involving the orbital apex.
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So when the orbital apex is involved, as it is here,
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you can still see it going into the back of the orbit.
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You have to be concerned about compromise of the optic nerve.
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And if you go and look inside an eye like this,
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you may actually see nerve pallor because the
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nerve is subjected to extremes of ischemia.
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On the other hand,
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if this lesion is pretty big and it grows backwards,
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and gives you obstructive hydrocephalus.
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You may have pallor due to vascular compromise on
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this side, but papilledema on the other side.
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That's weird.
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So one pale and one hot, one swollen,
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and that's known as the Foster Kennedy syndrome.
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And it's very typical of meningiomas that cross the
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midline or go back in and obstruct the third ventricle,
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yet involve the orbital apex.
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This one is involving the orbital apex.
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Now, another characteristic of meningiomas in this region,
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especially the onclock ones,
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is that they like to kind of grow and
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wrap themselves around vessels.
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And that can be very problematic because it makes them
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very difficult to get out of there and they
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can even cause vascular occlusions.
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Do you want to make any other comments about how
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meningiomas relate to the skull
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base and the onclock type?
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So I think...
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actually, everything you said
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was exactly what you want to look for.
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Important things to look for are the arteries,
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what is the lesion doing to the arteries?
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Is it narrowing the arteries?
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Is it obstructing the arteries?
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And then what is it doing to the cranial nerves?
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I think in dislocation,
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that is probably the most important thing to discuss.
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So, you might want to have an MRA or a dynamic
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CTA or a dynamic MRA in a case like this,
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just so you map out the vascular anatomy before you go
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tackle a lesion like this because you're trying
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to save the patient's vision on one eye.
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By the way, for those of you that are detail-oriented,
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the optic lens is hyperintense,
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and that's typically what you see when
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somebody has done a lens replacement.
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So this patient has had cataract surgery.
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So, in summary,
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this is an example of an optic nerve meningioma
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that's involving the apex.
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Now, it probably came from the sphenoid ridge
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and then went into the apex
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or the anterior clinoid and went into the apex
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as opposed to the primary optic nerve meningioma,
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in which you'll have a nerve.
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And then along the course of the nerve,
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you'll have what's known as the tram track of the meningioma.
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So you'll actually see the nerve inside.
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You may see a little cleft between the
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meningioma and the nerve itself.
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I'll draw the cleft with another color.
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Cleft maybe here in yellow.
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And then you'll have the meningioma as a more
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solid structure on the outside.
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That's gray.
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And the nerve itself will also be gray.
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So that's what gives you this railroad track
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or tram track sign.
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More typical of primary optic nerve meningioma,
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as opposed to one that has
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grown in from the back.
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Let's move on.
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