Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Laser,
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we've been following this hemangioblastoma
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for six years on up.
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Patient is now about 35 years of age.
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We're talking about how these change and grow and mature.
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You already established in a prior vignette
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that when they come back, they could have been solid.
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Now, they're cystic.
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They were cystic.
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Now, they're solid.
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And this one, not only has it grown,
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but for you gen rads out there,
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general radiologists, residents and fellows,
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look at what it's done.
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It is compressed the fourth ventricle.
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You can see the nodulus of the cerebellum
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pressed right up against the medulla.
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And as we come up,
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we see the ventricles are dilated.
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So this patient has developed obstructive
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hydrocephalus at the level of the fourth ventricle.
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And we've got a much larger lesion if you look
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at the earlier vignettes,
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and the lesion has actually changed.
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So Dr. Laser, tell me about the characteristics
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of hemangioblastoma.
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So, hemangioblastomas are a true neoplasm
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of endothelial origin.
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They are...
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they have intense hypervascular character.
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So they can be capillary to sinusoidal,
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they can have a dilating feeding artery,
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they can have a dilated feeding vein,
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they can have slow flow.
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Typically, they're made up of stromal cells.
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They have foamy lipid-laden properties,
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and they do not contain any amyloid.
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So, what do we see inside this one?
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I mean, it's got a very heterogeneous character
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that it didn't have so much before.
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What are we looking at?
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So, we're looking at a couple of things.
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One of them is that this lesion has
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changed character.
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Now it has it's predominantly solid with several
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different cystic areas.
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It has all these tiny little serpiginous flow voids
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and cystic components.
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Yeah, these little dark squiggly
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things are flow voids.
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And that is really inconsistent with, say,
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a pilocytic tumor, and many other tumors.
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Sometimes you'll actually see a nodule in a
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classic scenario where you've got a cyst and
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then the nodule is pretty good size.
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And then inside that nodule are flow voids
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that are dotted and somewhat serpiginous,
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and that's very typical of a hemangioblastoma.
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So this one has recurred with a very
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bizarre internal character to it.
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Cystic components, dark on T1,
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bright on T2,
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and serpiginous flow void components,
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you can see a little bit of them right there.
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And you can see them a little better on the
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susceptibility-weighted or blood-sensitive image right there,
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especially there and there,
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denoting the hypervascularity of this lesion.
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Any other comments?
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Nope.
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Laser and P out.
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All right.
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