Interactive Transcript
0:00
I'm back with my colleague,
0:01
Dr. Ben Laser,
0:02
talking about a 29-year-old with Von Hippel-Lindau.
0:05
We've got an axial pre and post-contrast T1 FLAIR,
0:08
enhancing nodule with a cystic mass,
0:11
the most common type,
0:13
35% of hemangioblastoma presentations.
0:17
Although when the nodule has a cyst inside it,
0:19
that's a little less frequent.
0:21
And this one does.
0:22
So, strictly speaking,
0:23
it's a lower percentage, like 6% to 12% for this type.
0:26
And then the solid type,
0:27
which is the second most common,
0:29
usually smaller.
0:30
We've got one in the lateral cerebellar hemisphere,
0:33
and we've also got another one down lower,
0:34
so a second one.
0:36
So now I would ask you,
0:37
what do we do as radiologists now?
0:39
What should we be doing besides giving a
0:42
diagnosis or differential diagnosis?
0:44
So the next step would be to actually image the
0:47
entire neural axis, pre and post-contrast.
0:49
Okay, let's do that.
0:51
Let's pull down a cervical spine image from this patient,
0:54
which was done with contrast.
0:56
And we can scroll up and down with our eye,
1:00
and scroll side to side with our mouse.
1:03
And as we scan up and down with our eye,
1:06
we come upon this thing.
1:07
You might say to yourself, really?
1:09
That small?
1:10
Are you going to call a hemangioblastoma
1:12
for a lesion that small?
1:13
Well, the answer is yes, they are that small.
1:16
Now, the major differential diagnosis here is maybe you're
1:19
catching a small kink in some peel vessels,
1:22
but they usually sit along the dorsal spine.
1:25
They're usually like little cherry-red nodules
1:27
right in the back of the spine.
1:29
And a lot of surgeons will go after these
1:32
because they bleed very readily.
1:34
So if they bleed in the spine,
1:35
it's a lot more catastrophic,
1:36
where you don't have a lot of space than if they bleed
1:39
in the cerebellum.
1:40
That's not good either.
1:41
But they are very vascular.
1:43
So, often, they have to come out at a small size.
1:45
So now we scan up and down, don't see any others.
1:49
Let's check out the thoracic spine.
1:52
Let's scroll back and forth.
1:54
And there is a nodule right there.
1:57
Very tough to see.
1:58
I'm going to blow it up for you in a minute.
2:00
There's a nodule that's a little more clear,
2:02
also very tough to see.
2:03
You're going to say,
2:04
"Really? That small?"
2:05
And the answer is,
2:06
"Absolutely. That small."
2:08
These have to be very carefully watched.
2:10
There's one of the nodules right there.
2:11
And let's zoom out and show you the second nodule.
2:14
Here's the second nodule right here.
2:17
It's a little more round, as opposed to, say,
2:19
the peel vessels, which are more linear.
2:21
Those are peel vessels there.
2:22
Here is a nodule of Von Hippel-Lindau,
2:25
another very small hemangioblastoma.
2:28
So, there are different subtypes of hemangioblastoma.
2:31
Type one is von Hippel-Lindau without Pheo.
2:34
Patients have renal and pancreatic cysts,
2:36
renal cell carcinoma.
2:37
This is the most common type.
2:38
The second most common type, or the type two, actually,
2:42
is Von Hippel-Lindau with Pheo.
2:44
So we break them down without Pheo and with Pheo.
2:47
And you have 2A,
2:48
islet cell tumors can occur here without cysts.
2:50
2B, renal and pancreatic disease.
2:54
So, in summary,
2:55
what are the places that you look in Von Hippel-Lindau?
2:59
You look in the spine.
3:00
How about in the brain?
3:01
What's the triad in the brain you got to look?
3:03
Posterior fossa, cerebellar hemisphere,
3:06
the eyes, retinal hemangioblastoma,
3:09
and then the internal auditory canals
3:10
and the temporal bone.
3:12
Looking for?
3:13
Endolymphatic sac tumor.
3:14
All right, Pomeranz and Laser out.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.