Interactive Transcript
0:00
Dr. Laser,
0:01
we've established a diagnosis of Von Hippel-Lindau
0:03
in this now 30-something-year-old man.
0:07
When we first saw him in one of the earlier vignettes,
0:09
it was 2012.
0:11
So it's been five years.
0:12
And we've been following him,
0:14
we looked at his cervical thoracic region,
0:16
which is where hemangioblastoma likes to live.
0:18
They don't like to live in the lumbar region.
0:20
Although, I have seen a few of them in the Conus medullaris,
0:23
I've actually not seen any in my experience
0:26
in the cauda equina or in the tip of the filum.
0:30
So now, we're scrolling through the lumbar,
0:32
just for completeness,
0:33
to make sure we don't have any down below.
0:36
And as we scroll the axial projection
0:38
and then the sagittal projection,
0:41
one thing really sticks out in the sagittal projection,
0:43
which is this bright lesion.
0:45
And most of the time we would attribute that to a cyst,
0:47
but let's look at its appearance
0:49
on the axial T1-weighted image.
0:52
And there is a cyst in the left kidney.
0:54
Let's find that cyst.
0:57
There's a cyst in the left kidney.
0:59
It's quite a bit darker than this lesion.
1:02
Mm-hmm.
1:03
So what could this thing be?
1:04
What are some options?
1:06
So, the association of renal cell carcinoma
1:10
is very high with Von Hippel-Lindau.
1:11
So that would be the number one consideration
1:13
when you see something like this.
1:15
So, a cystic renal cell has to be excluded.
1:17
Now, there are multiple cysts throughout both kidneys.
1:19
There's one there,
1:20
there's one there,
1:21
and you do get cysts.
1:23
In fact, you get cysts of the epididymis,
1:25
although some people feel that they're epididymal cystadenomas
1:28
more consistently than they are epididymal cysts,
1:31
you also get cysts of the liver, the lungs,
1:33
the pancreas and of course, the kidneys.
1:36
But let's talk about some of the classic lesions
1:39
in Von Hippel-Lindau.
1:40
Because you've got to screen
1:42
the entire individual for these lesions.
1:44
And they include hemangioblastoma,
1:45
so the brain,
1:47
cervical thoracic region,
1:48
uncommon in the lumbar.
1:49
Then you've got retinal angiomas,
1:51
which are actually retinal baby hemangioblastomas.
1:55
We talked about the cysts,
1:57
including epididymal cysts.
1:58
You see a giant epididymal cyst...
2:00
a giant epididymal cyst in a young man,
2:02
you've got to think at least about Von Hippel-Lindau,
2:05
especially if they've had neurologic symptoms.
2:08
Then you've got renal cysts and renal cell carcinoma.
2:12
There are other renal manifestations we'll discuss in
2:14
another vignette: pheochromocytoma,
2:16
epididymal cystadenoma,
2:18
in addition to epididymal cysts.
2:20
In my world,
2:22
I actually distinguish the two
2:23
and I have seen both.
2:24
Proven.
2:25
So I separate them.
2:26
And then, endolymphatic sac tumor.
2:28
So one caveat,
2:29
you see an epididymal mass in a young man,
2:32
it's not automatically a cyst,
2:34
it could be a cyst or a cystadenoma.
2:37
Don't forget to look at the triad in the brain,
2:39
which is the globes,
2:41
the cerebellum, and the temporal bones.
2:44
And the temporal bones,
2:44
especially the endolymphatic sac region.
2:47
Let's move on, shall we?
2:49
Let's.
2:49
Laser and P out.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.