Interactive Transcript
0:01
All right, my faithful watchers and listeners,
0:04
this is our quiz case.
0:05
So here we have a patient who has a known lymphoma.
0:10
We know that lymphoma is one of the diagnoses that
0:13
can lead to intradural intramedullary lesions.
0:18
intradural extramedullary lesions,
0:21
as well as extradural lesions.
0:23
So you can have it in the spinal cord,
0:24
you can have it seeding into the subarachnoid space
0:27
in the intradural extramedullary compartment,
0:29
and you may have it involving the bones or the soft
0:32
tissues outside the dura as extradural disease.
0:36
So this is a T1-weighted scan to the left
0:39
and a T2-weighted scan to the right.
0:41
Quiz time. Where's the lesion
0:45
as far as the space? In this case,
0:49
what we see is the mass here.
0:52
But as we look at the CSF space associated with it,
0:56
we see that it narrows rather than
1:00
widens at the junction with the mass.
1:04
Here, the CSF space is narrowing rather than widening.
1:10
So this is lymphoma,
1:12
but this is lymphoma in the extradural compartment,
1:16
not the intradural extramedullary compartment.
1:19
So, this is how we would analyze this case.
1:22
Lymphomas can be in any of the
1:24
different spaces,
1:25
but by virtue of the narrowing at the junction
1:28
with the tumor rather than widening.
1:31
This is an extradural lymphoma.
1:33
You might want to look at the signal
1:34
intensity of the spinal cord,
1:36
because although this is compressing
1:37
the spinal cord,
1:38
you don't see bright signal intensity
1:39
in the spinal cord.
1:40
This is a patient who we would not expect to
1:43
have a myelopathy associated with the mass.
1:47
And lymphoma is a type of tumor that will readily
1:50
respond to both radiation and chemotherapy
1:53
and may not require surgery.
© 2025 Medality. All Rights Reserved.