Interactive Transcript
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I'd like to share a case with you of a 29-year-old with
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nausea, vomiting, and headache.
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I'm Dr. Stephen Pomeranz.
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This is a young stud, neuroradiologist, Dr. Ben Laser.
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And we're talking about a weird case.
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A gentleman shows up, age 29, with these symptoms
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and this MRI, axial T1 3D.
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So T1 appearing, I believe it's a T1 FLAIR.
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There's an axial view of a cystic mass with a nodule
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associated with it. A T2 weighted image.
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There's our nodule and it might have a little cyst inside it.
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And then here is our cystic mass again,
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after contrast on the T1 flare and it's enhancing.
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So what would be some of your thoughts?
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What would be the differential here?
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So the first thing that I would take a
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look at would be the patient's age.
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So differential if the patient was greater than 30
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greater than 25 the first thing that would pop into my
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mind would be Hyang Blastoma um cyst
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with a mural nodule. Uh If the,
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if the patient was younger than 2015 or so,
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then Pilocytic astrocytoma would be on the differential. Yeah,
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And then, you know, if you're under age 10,
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almost never get hemangioblastoma.
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Even Von Hippel-Lindau cases,
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they usually show up a little bit later than pilocytic
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under age 10 strongly favors pilocytic under age five or six.
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I mean,
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overwhelmingly the diagnosis is going to be pilocytic.
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So human AOB blastoma in that age group, very rare.
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Conversely,
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it's not very rare to have a pilocytic in a 30-year-old.
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But certainly hemangioblastoma rises up to the top.
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It is the most common neoplasm in the
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young adult of the posterior fossa.
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And so you have to favor that diagnosis.
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And how about the appearance of it?
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Do you like the appearance for pilocytic or
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hemangioblastoma? In this case, hemangioblastoma?
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Actually on the T1 weighted sequence, you can,
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one thing you want to look at is the appearance
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of the cystic fluid component. In this case,
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comparing it to the fourth ventricle,
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you can see that the cystic component of the lesion is
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slightly hyperintense compared to the CSF. Yeah,
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it's a little grayer, it's a little grayer.
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Some of the things that I might use
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to help rule out pilocytic tumor.
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One of the things is the nodule if the nodule has a
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cyst inside it and this one does that speaks more to
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hemangioblastoma and if the nodule has voids little
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punctate flow voids inside, which you can sometimes see,
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I don't see it here but you see these little
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dark flow voids and they would be black,
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then pilocytic is virtually out as a potential diagnosis.
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The other thing you can do is make sure that you don't
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have any other lesions because usually you don't have
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multiple pilocytic astrocytoma. But usually in VHL,
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you do have many or more than one hemangioblastoma.
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And even if you don't have on hippo linda,
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chances are you might have it.
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So if you find the hemangioblastoma isolated without
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a diagnosis of VHL, you better be looking for VHL.
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So let's scroll and see if we can
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come up with any other lesions.
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It looks like somebody was fishing around here in the
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left cerebellum. So that's kind of suspicious.
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Let's go to the contrast enhanced image and boom.
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All of a sudden we find one in the lateral cerebellar
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hemisphere. What do you think that is?
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It looks like a solid solid hemangioblastoma?
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So we had one with a cyst with a cyst inside the cyst,
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a cyst in a nodule.
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We'll go through the appearance in a minute.
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We've got a solid looking one,
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which is the second most common type.
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This type usually seen about 35% of the time.
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This type, about 33% of the time. Let's see.
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Can we find any others?
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Let's scroll a little bit because
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very often when they're small,
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they'll show up as like a little cherry red nodule
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visually and our M they're very vascular and there's our
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cherry red nodule. Now, as part of this vignette,
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we'll come back to this case in a
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minute in a separate vignette.
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Let's draw some of the appearances of Von Hippel Linda.
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One is just a simple pro tenacious cyst
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looking mass without a nodule.
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Another one is a cyst with a mural nodule.
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That's the most common type, that's about 35%.
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Then you get a cyst with some irregular
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kind of nodule associated with it.
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Then you have a cyst with a mural nodule
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and a cyst within that mural nodule.
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And we kind of have that here. So if you are,
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if you're very O CD and very strict about it,
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this is actually this type which
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occurs about 6% of the time,
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then you've got a solid lesion like this and
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then you've got a cystic component within.
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So I'll make the cystic component green.
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So there's your cystic component inside
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a solid lesion that's about 12%. Now,
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we'll go back to red here for a minute or orange, red.
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And finally, the last one,
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the second most common type is the solid mass. Now,
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the solid mass in my experience is always much smaller
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than the cystic mass with a nodule. And in fact,
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that's not just an experience,
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I think you can take that as gold because if these
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things get this big, you know, if they get really big,
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then they're going to bleed.
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So the reason you don't see them like this
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is they bled when they're about this size.
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So they've often been removed.
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They don't get to be this big.
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So that is the appearance of hemangioblastoma.
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Let's move on to the next vignette and discuss this
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case in a little more detail. Shall we?
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We shall.
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Laser and P out.
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