Training Collections
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
Training Collections
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
42 topics, 2 hr. 16 min.
Introduction to Intradural Extramedullary Lesions
4 m.Standard MRI Pulse Sequences for Evaluating Spinal Lesions
3 m.Cystic Lumbar Schwanoma
4 m.Lumbar Spine Solid Schwanoma vs. Meningioma
3 m.Cervical Spine Plexiform Neurofibroma in a Patient with NF1
6 m.Intradural Extramedullary Lesion Differential Diagosis
3 m.Nerve Sheath Tumors of the Spine
5 m.Neurofibromatosis Type 2
4 m.Neurofibromatosis Type 1
4 m.Spinal Meningiomas
5 m.Thoracic Spine Meningioma
4 m.Calcified Meningioma
3 m.Cervical Spine Meningioma
4 m.Cervical Spine Meningioma, Atypical Location
4 m.Spinal Hemangioblastomas
3 m.Multiple Hemangioblastomas, Von Hippel Lindau
4 m.Myxopapillary Ependymoma
4 m.Spinal Paraganglioma
2 m.Differential Diagosis of Intradural Metastasis
10 m.Subarachnoid Seeding from Medulloblastoma
4 m.Subarachoid Seeding in a Breast Cancer Patient
3 m.Spinal Lymphoma
2 m.Congenital and Developmental IDEM Cysts
8 m.Neurenteric Cysts
4 m.Transdural Herniation of the Spinal Cord
3 m.Spinal Arachoid Cyst
3 m.Prominent Transdural Herniation of the Spinal Cord
2 m.Fat Containing Spine Lesions
4 m.Lumbar Spine Lipoma
2 m.Pediatric Lumbar Lipoma and a Congenital Malformation
3 m.Lipoma vs. Fatty Infiltration of the Filum
3 m.Congenital Dural Ectasia
3 m.Dural Ectasia
2 m.Dural Arteriovenous Fistula Type 1
4 m.Dural AVF vs. Normal Variation
5 m.Review of Dural AVF Types II, III, and IV
3 m.IDEM Infectious and Inflammatory Abormalities
6 m.Guillian Barre Syndrome
3 m.Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy
3 m.CIDP Causing Cauda Equina Syndrome
3 m.CIDP Causing Brachial Plexopathy
3 m.Indradural Extramedullary Processes - Conclusion
2 m.0:01
As neuroradiologists,
0:02
when we think about paragangliomas,
0:04
we usually are thinking about head and neck lesions,
0:07
and those would include our glomus tympanicum
0:10
tumors in the middle ear cavity,
0:11
our glomus jugulare tumor in the jugular foramen, our
0:16
carotid body tumor at the carotid bifurcation,
0:20
and our glomus vagale tumor at the
0:22
C1-C2 skull base region.
0:25
And these are the typical locations for paragangliomas.
0:28
Rarely, you will see a paraganglioma in the same
0:31
general vicinity as where we see myxopapillary
0:36
ependymomas, and that is down here at the
0:38
cauda equina and filum terminale.
0:41
These lesions will be characterized by avid contrast
0:45
enhancement and relatively low incidence
0:49
of cystic change or hemorrhagic change.
0:53
Very rarely you will see it as a hypervascular
0:56
lesion with flow voids associated with it.
0:59
And you will see it as this intensely enhancing
1:03
tumor on the post-gadolinium-enhanced scan.
1:07
So we'll have a differential diagnosis which
1:09
would include all of the other tumors,
1:10
including schwannomas, meningiomas,
1:13
as well as the filum terminale ependymomas.
1:17
So again,
1:18
the feature that would be most helpful is the very
1:21
avid enhancement that you expect with paragangliomas
1:24
and if present, vascular flow voids.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
As neuroradiologists,
0:02
when we think about paragangliomas,
0:04
we usually are thinking about head and neck lesions,
0:07
and those would include our glomus tympanicum
0:10
tumors in the middle ear cavity,
0:11
our glomus jugulare tumor in the jugular foramen, our
0:16
carotid body tumor at the carotid bifurcation,
0:20
and our glomus vagale tumor at the
0:22
C1-C2 skull base region.
0:25
And these are the typical locations for paragangliomas.
0:28
Rarely, you will see a paraganglioma in the same
0:31
general vicinity as where we see myxopapillary
0:36
ependymomas, and that is down here at the
0:38
cauda equina and filum terminale.
0:41
These lesions will be characterized by avid contrast
0:45
enhancement and relatively low incidence
0:49
of cystic change or hemorrhagic change.
0:53
Very rarely you will see it as a hypervascular
0:56
lesion with flow voids associated with it.
0:59
And you will see it as this intensely enhancing
1:03
tumor on the post-gadolinium-enhanced scan.
1:07
So we'll have a differential diagnosis which
1:09
would include all of the other tumors,
1:10
including schwannomas, meningiomas,
1:13
as well as the filum terminale ependymomas.
1:17
So again,
1:18
the feature that would be most helpful is the very
1:21
avid enhancement that you expect with paragangliomas
1:24
and if present, vascular flow voids.
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)
MRI
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