Interactive Transcript
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This was a case with a fascinating history.
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It's a 70-year-old woman who was having
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difficulty with ambulation, secondary to loss
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of position sense on clinical evaluation.
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She was using a walker and was
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having episodes of falling.
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On the MRI scan, looking at the sagittal
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STIR imaging, we were initially sort of
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fascinated by this disc herniation, which was
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migrating behind the inferior endplate of C4.
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Uh, and on the T2-weighted scan, you can see,
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uh, the degenerative disc disease.
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I'm going to magnify this a little bit more
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and bring it back down so we can look at that
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cervical spine a little bit more closely.
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Not all that dramatic on
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the T2-weighted images here.
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If we look at the axial T2-weighted
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scan, we were struck by the persistent
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bright signal intensity in the central
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posterior portion of the spinal cord.
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Let me magnify that up so that even the
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person behind you can see the case and
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I'm gonna make it a little bit more contrasty.
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So what we're looking at is the
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bright signal in the midline of the
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posterior aspect of the spinal cord.
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So let's focus right here.
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And this corresponds to some small area of
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bright signal intensity seen in the posterior
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spinal cord at the upper cervical region.
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I think it's actually better seen
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on the, uh, sagittal STIR image.
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Let me just bring that back down
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and magnify.
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And then maybe it is a little bit more convincing.
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Just scroll here to another level.
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So what we're looking at is the
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bright signal intensity in the
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posterior aspect of the spinal cord.
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And on either side of the midline
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affecting the posterior columns.
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So this patient had B12 levels
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drawn and they were normal.
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Turned out that when further serologic
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testing was performed, we did discover
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that this patient had copper deficiency.
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The etiology for this copper deficiency is what
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I find the most fascinating and the clinical
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note said that she had copper deficiency,
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secondary to zinc toxicity
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due to denture cream overuse.
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So apparently the zinc in the denture cream was
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being swallowed and absorbed and was binding or,
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or, uh, competing with the copper uptake such that
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she developed copper deficiency as the etiology
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for her subacute combined, uh, degeneration.
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So this was not from B12 deficiency.
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This was actually from copper deficiency.
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Folate deficiency and nitrous oxide
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toxicity are the other etiologies
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potentially for this same abnormality.
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So as you scroll the axials, maybe you're, it's
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a little bit more convincing that there's always
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this persistent bright signal intensity in the
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paramedian region of the posterior columns.
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And this patient was pretty
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much devastated by that.
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And, uh, despite copper replenishment,
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still was Walker dependent.
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