Interactive Transcript
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I'd like to show a few cases of disease in the epidural
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space which is unassociated with the vertebral bodies and
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yet still is likely to cause compression of the spinal cord.
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And I'm going to show a series of cases here.
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This is a patient who has these low signal intensity areas
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in the epidural fat, compressing the spinal cord anteriorly.
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We notice that these low signal intensity areas on
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T2-weighted scanning are the same signal intensity
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as the bone marrow. This is an additional case.
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This patient has had a post myelogram CT performed, and we see
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that there is soft tissue in the posterior epidural space,
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which is compressing the thecal sac anteriorly.
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We notice that the bones don't look particularly good here,
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this sort of osteopenic anemic-looking bones.
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And even in the lumbar region,
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we do have areas of abnormal signal intensity in the
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anterior epidural space associated with the sacrum.
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Both of these cases were patients who had
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extramedullary hematopoiesis, that is,
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red marrow cells effectively in the epidural space,
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which can lead to compression of the spinal cord.
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We see that this is epidural on the axial CT
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scan, post myelogram, the cord, the thecal sac,
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and then in the epidural space, the soft tissue.
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Here is another case of extramedullary hematopoiesis.
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In this case, we see that there is high signal intensity
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on post-contrast imaging in the soft tissue on either side of
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the spinal cord in the epidural space,
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and that also is typical of active marrow in the epidural space.
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And this has led to compression of the thecal sac in a
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polygonal pattern that has been described as
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a sign of extramedullary hematopoiesis.
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