Interactive Transcript
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So now we have another patient that presents with
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right-sided hearing loss and also some dizziness.
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So how do we analyze this case?
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So, when we look at the right cerebellopontine angle,
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we can see this cystic area that's involving the
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right cerebellopontine angle that's located
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just medial to the right porus acusticus.
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Also, we can see a little bit of mass effect of the
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adjacent right middle cerebellar peduncle
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and compare this side with this side.
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So there certainly is some mass effect.
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So now,
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once we see that there's a cystic lesion there,
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what's our next step in our analysis?
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Well, the next step is we want to look at the diffusion
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imaging. And as we learned earlier,
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if there is no increased signal
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on the diffusion sequence,
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then we think that this area is probably cystic.
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But if there is high signal,
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as we learned earlier in an earlier vignette,
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then we start thinking about an epidermoid.
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So in this particular case,
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we can see there's no signal.
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This gives us the confidence that we're dealing with
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a cystic component just medial to the right porus
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acusticus. As we look at the next area,
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we now see that there's a mass involving
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the right half of the dorsal midbrain,
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the right cerebral peduncle.
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And we can see there's an expansile mass that's
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low signal on the T1-weighted images.
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And when we give contrast,
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we can see there's homogeneous enhancement to this.
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So now we have a mass that's involving
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the right cerebellopontine angle.
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But unlike the other lesions that were all extra
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axial, this enhancing component is intra-axial.
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So instead of an extraaxial mass,
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which can arise from the meninges,
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it can arise from the nerves,
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it can arise from some type of ectodermal origin,
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this is now an intra-axial lesion.
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And when you see a mass that's an intra-axial lesion,
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now we have to start thinking about a tumor that
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has glial origin. So in this particular case,
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this is a juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma that's
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arising from the right cerebral peduncle
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that isn't associated with a cyst.
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Now, sometimes when we think of juvenile pilocytic
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astrocytomas, which is what this is,
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we think of a cystic lesion with a mural nodule.
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This just happens to be a large intra-axial enhancing
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lesion, associated with that cyst.
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So it's not technically a mural nodule,
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but it is a densely enhancing intra-axial
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mass with an eccentric cystic component.
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