Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Laser,
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we're back with our 29-year-old with Von Hippel-Lindau.
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He originally had a T1-FLAIR.
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The sections were 5 mm or less,
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but not as thin as we see here,
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1 mm in the middle.
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And at that time, it looked like a solid nodule.
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Now, they had already resected it, and it had recurred.
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And now two years later,
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it is morphing on this recurrence and behaving a little
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bit differently, which I find strange.
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I understand that's not strange.
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No, it's actually very common when
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once the lesion has been resected,
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it can come back as a cystic lesion when before it was
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solid or it can come back from a solid lesion to a cystic lesion,
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or it can come back from a solid lesion to a
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solid lesion with a cyst inside.
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Very bizarre.
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Now, I know these lesions bleed readily.
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They're very friable.
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And when you look at them at surgery,
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they're like cherry red nodules,
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you can actually see the vascularity inside them.
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But what makes them potentially brighter than CSF,
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or the nodules a little bit bright.
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Is it blood that does that?
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It can be blood.
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It can be methemoglobin from
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from prior hemorrhage within the tumor
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or you could have a lipid component,
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which also could be intrinsically hyperintense
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on a T1-weighted sequence.
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Now, this one has an atypical appearance on recurrence
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and that it is a solid nodule.
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You kind of see...
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I'll trace right over it right there.
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And there's this dark spot in the middle
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and that is not calcification.
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That is not flow void either because if it was flow void,
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it wouldn't be bright over here on the T2-weighted image.
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So this is an actual solid lesion with right in the middle,
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or slightly to the viewer's left,
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a cystic component inside the mass.
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So that configuration,
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solid with a cyst inside, 12%.
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Let's just quickly review before we leave this particular case,
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the different appearances of Von Hippel-Lindau.
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We've got a pure cyst,
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8% of the time.
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We've got a cyst with a mural nodule,
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35% of the time.
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That's the classic.
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We'll show you a more classic appearance in a little bit,
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with some flow voids in the mural nodule,
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which helps you differentiate from pilocytic astrocytoma.
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Then you've got the weird one where you've got a cyst
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and then kind of a funny solid component to it.
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That's 6%.
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Perhaps that's tied for the least common.
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And then you've got a cyst with a nodule.
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And then inside the nodule is a cystic component.
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That's 6% also.
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Then you've got a solid lesion
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and if you color that in,
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and there's a part of that lesion that is a cyst,
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just like in this case that we have here.
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And that's seen about 12% of the time.
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And then you've got a completely solid lesion all the way through.
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That's the second most common type seen,
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33% of the time.
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Although those are usually smaller,
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and you usually see those along the edge or
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surface of the spine or the cerebellum.
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Pomeranz and Laser out.
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Out.
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Out.
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