Interactive Transcript
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This was a young adult who had weakness
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in the upper extremities.
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We have here the T1-weighted,
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T2-weighted, STIR, and post-gadolinium enhanced scans.
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On the T1-weighted scan,
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we have a low signal intensity lesion which
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shows bright signal intensity on the T2-weighted
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scan and the STIR images,
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and the cord appears to be expanded.
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On the post-gadolinium enhanced scan,
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we see that there is indeed contrast enhancement
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in somewhat of a peripheral nature.
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This is an example of a case where, frankly,
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I would not be able to distinguish between a
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neoplastic lesion, an inflammatory lesion,
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or a demyelinating lesion.
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All of them can cause cord expansion and usually
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show some element of contrast enhancement if
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it's an active demyelinating process
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within the demyelinating disorders.
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Because it is a long-segment
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disease that expands three segments,
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we would have to consider something.
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like neuromyelitis optica.
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Within the inflammatory infectious etiologies,
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there are any number of viral myelitis that can
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cause cord expansion and cord enhancement.
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The next step in this patient
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would be to do CSF sampling.
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The CSF sampling may be useful for CSF cytology,
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although for spinal cord lesions,
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it's not all that high yield.
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But you would include the demyelinating markers
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within the CSF, including myelin basic protein,
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among others. And you would do your culture
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and cells that may help you identify a bacterial
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or a viral myelitis.
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This particular case ended up being...
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I'm sorry, an idiopathic acquired
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transverse myelitis. That is,
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they never discovered any viral illnesses.
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the patient did not have any
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antecedent illnesses,
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the patient did not have an autoimmune disorder.
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And with steroids, this lesion resolved.
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Sometimes when you're looking at spinal
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cord lesions like this one,
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you're in multiple categories of disease,
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including neoplastic, demyelinating,
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and infectious inflammatory,
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and you just have to throw up your hands and say,
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'Recommend evaluation of the cerebrospinal fluid.'
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Besides throwing our hands up and recommending
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CSF sampling, what else could we do as radiologists?
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In this situation, it would be helpful to recommend
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evaluation of the brain and the remainder of the
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spinal cord evaluation. Why so? Well,
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if you saw multiple periventricular and
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subcortical lesions in the brain,
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you may go back to a demyelinating
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process that would suggest something like
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multiple sclerosis or neuromyelitis optica,
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or other demyelinating disorders.
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Similarly,
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if you found additional lesions in the spinal
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cord below the cervical region at
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the mid to lower thoracic spine,
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it might also suggest a demyelinating disorder,
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since that would be unusual for myelitis,
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which is usually a solitary lesion.
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You'd still have the category of neoplasm with
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multifocal astrocytomas or ependymomas
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if the patient had, for example,
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neurofibromatosis type 1 or
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neurofibromatosis type 2.
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So in addition to recommending CSF sampling,
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recommend evaluation of the brain for other
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demyelinating lesions or the remainder
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of the spinal cord.
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