Interactive Transcript
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When we think about malignant bone lesions,
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far and away, we should be considering metastases.
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And these metastases may be from the most
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common of the primary malignancies in men and
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women, those being lung, breast, melanomas,
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and in men, prostate cancer in particular.
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Prostate cancer is characterized by
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predominantly blastic metastases.
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In addition, another common
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primary bone process is metastases.
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Multiple myeloma is part of the
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plasma cell dyscrasia syndromes.
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Lymphoma may involve the bone as
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well as the extradural tissues.
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In children, we think about the malignancies
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being neuroblastoma and teratoma.
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Here is a patient who has a destructive
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lesion that is affecting both the
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clivus as well as the C1 anterior arch.
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As you can see, it grows into the
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prevertebral soft tissues as well.
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And this was a metastasis from lung cancer.
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Here is a case that I showed previously as an
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unknown case in the intradural extramedullary.
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This is a process which is located in the posterior
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epidural space, infiltrating where the epidural fat is.
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And this was a case of lymphoma.
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This lymphoma causes narrowing of the thecal sac
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below and above the lesion rather than widening it.
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Therefore, we know that it is in the epidural space
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as opposed to the intradural extramedullary space.
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As you can see, the epidural fat is
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effaced at the level of the tumor.
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And this tumor causes compression of the spinal cord.
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Diffusion-weighted scanning is not typically
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performed as a routine for MRI.
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However, if one were to perform such in this case, we
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would expect to see decreased ADC, as is characteristic
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of lymphoma elsewhere in the central nervous system.
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So, reduced apparent diffusion coefficient.
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Here is a patient who has a process
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that very much could have looked like
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a discitis osteomyelitis infection.
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So, you see that there is destruction of the two
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adjacent vertebrae with bright signal intensity
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centrally within the intervertebral disc.
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And it looks as if there is epidural
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compression from the anterior epidural space.
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This ended up being metastatic disease.
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From lung cancer.
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Here is a patient who has a sacral region.
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This is L5, this is S1, this is S
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2, and then we have this process down here.
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What's in our differential diagnosis of sacral region?
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Well, it really depends on whether we're
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dealing with adults or pediatric population.
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In the adult, the most common thing is gonna
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be a chordoma followed by a plasmacytoma.
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And of course, we have metastatic disease.
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In the children, we're dealing with a teratoma,
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most commonly, or metastatic disease
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usually associated with neuroblastoma.
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This was an adult, but it was an adult who had a teratoma.
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