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34 topics, 1 hr. 48 min.
Extradural Spine Lesions
7 m.Degenerative Spondylomyelopathy
3 m.Traumatic Lesions of the Spine
6 m.Subdural Hematoma of the Spine
2 m.Epidural Hematoma of the Spine
2 m.Post-operative Hematoma
4 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis of the Spine
5 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis with Epidural Phlegmon/Abscess
4 m.Tuberculous Spondylitis
5 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis with Prevertebral Abscess
2 m.Discitis Osteomyelitis with Anterior Epidural Phlegmon
3 m.Epidural Abscess from Facet Joint Infectious Synovitis
4 m.Paraspinal Abscess with Epidural Extension
3 m.Summary of Extradural Neoplasms
4 m.Lumbar Spine Schwannoma Extending into the Neural Foramen
2 m.Primary Osseous Extradural Neoplasms
8 m.Osteochondroma of the Spine
3 m.Extradural Metastatic Disease
4 m.Chondrosarcoma of the Spine
4 m.Metastatic Disease vs. Multiple Myeloma
3 m.Malignant versus Benign Compression Fractures
7 m.Extramedullary Hematopoiesis of the Epidural Space
3 m.Paraspinal Extramedullary Hematopoiesis
2 m.Multifocal Epidural Extramedullary Hematopoiesis
4 m.Epidural Lipomatosis
3 m.Extradural Congenital Lesions
6 m.Epidermoid Cyst of the Thoracic Spine
3 m.Spinal Congenital Anomalies: Myelomeningoceles
6 m.Cervicothoracic Myelomeningocele
3 m.Recurrent Myelomeningocele and Cord Tethering After Repair
2 m.Diastematomyelia
3 m.Diastematomyelia
3 m.Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy
3 m.Extradural Processes – Conclusion
3 m.0:00
Well, here's a patient who is being evaluated for severe
0:05
neck pain. On the sagittal reconstructions
0:07
of an axial CT scan,
0:10
we see that there are multiple lesions in the spine.
0:14
We have a compressed vertebra of C3.
0:18
We have a lytic area along the
0:20
posterior elements of T2.
0:24
We have a vertebra plana that is a very
0:27
thin vertebral body at T3.
0:30
And we see that there are other lytic lesions
0:33
identified even into the manubrium,
0:36
where there appears to be a pathologic fracture.
0:38
An additional compressed vertebra is seen here at the
0:41
T5 level. And if we actually look more superiorly,
0:46
we identify that there appears to be a portion of the
0:48
clivus that's completely missing here as it
0:52
has been eroded with a lytic process.
0:55
So we have multiple bone lesions which are lytic
0:59
in nature in an 60 year old individual.
1:03
First and foremost,
1:04
we would consider metastatic disease.
1:05
Oh, look, there's even a lesion in the mandible.
1:07
A couple of lesions in the mandible, even.
1:10
So, diffuse lytic process affecting multiple bones in the
1:15
spinal canal, the skull base, the manubrium, even the mandible.
1:19
So differential diagnosis is metastatic disease versus
1:23
multiple myeloma. This was multiple myeloma.
1:27
Multiple myeloma affects the skull in a very high
1:30
percentage of cases. And this clivus lesion,
1:33
which is extending to the petrous apex,
1:36
is pretty classic for a patient
1:39
who has multiple myeloma.
1:41
They may have lytic lesions throughout their calvarium
1:45
in frontal, parietal, temporal bones.
1:47
And here you see additional cases of lytic lesion in the
1:52
cervical spine. As far as having vertebra plana,
1:58
that is more in keeping with a patient who has multiple
2:01
myeloma than is with metastatic disease, because these
2:05
vertebral bodies are associated with such poor
2:10
bone that they will flatten. In a child,
2:13
when we have vertebra plana,
2:14
we're more likely to suggest histiocytosis x. In a 60 year
2:19
old with multiple lytic lesions in skull and cervical
2:22
spine, multiple myelomas, the best diagnosis.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
Well, here's a patient who is being evaluated for severe
0:05
neck pain. On the sagittal reconstructions
0:07
of an axial CT scan,
0:10
we see that there are multiple lesions in the spine.
0:14
We have a compressed vertebra of C3.
0:18
We have a lytic area along the
0:20
posterior elements of T2.
0:24
We have a vertebra plana that is a very
0:27
thin vertebral body at T3.
0:30
And we see that there are other lytic lesions
0:33
identified even into the manubrium,
0:36
where there appears to be a pathologic fracture.
0:38
An additional compressed vertebra is seen here at the
0:41
T5 level. And if we actually look more superiorly,
0:46
we identify that there appears to be a portion of the
0:48
clivus that's completely missing here as it
0:52
has been eroded with a lytic process.
0:55
So we have multiple bone lesions which are lytic
0:59
in nature in an 60 year old individual.
1:03
First and foremost,
1:04
we would consider metastatic disease.
1:05
Oh, look, there's even a lesion in the mandible.
1:07
A couple of lesions in the mandible, even.
1:10
So, diffuse lytic process affecting multiple bones in the
1:15
spinal canal, the skull base, the manubrium, even the mandible.
1:19
So differential diagnosis is metastatic disease versus
1:23
multiple myeloma. This was multiple myeloma.
1:27
Multiple myeloma affects the skull in a very high
1:30
percentage of cases. And this clivus lesion,
1:33
which is extending to the petrous apex,
1:36
is pretty classic for a patient
1:39
who has multiple myeloma.
1:41
They may have lytic lesions throughout their calvarium
1:45
in frontal, parietal, temporal bones.
1:47
And here you see additional cases of lytic lesion in the
1:52
cervical spine. As far as having vertebra plana,
1:58
that is more in keeping with a patient who has multiple
2:01
myeloma than is with metastatic disease, because these
2:05
vertebral bodies are associated with such poor
2:10
bone that they will flatten. In a child,
2:13
when we have vertebra plana,
2:14
we're more likely to suggest histiocytosis x. In a 60 year
2:19
old with multiple lytic lesions in skull and cervical
2:22
spine, multiple myelomas, the best diagnosis.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Spine
Neuroradiology
Neoplastic
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
CT
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