Interactive Transcript
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This is an axial T2-weighted image
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of our 67-year-old with Huntington's chorea.
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There are some tiny,
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little bright areas in the basal ganglia,
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and these represent nothing more than medial and
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lateral MCA territory perforators.
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But if you were to have areas of microhemorrhage
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in the basal ganglia,
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then you might start thinking about other disorders,
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including vasculitis.
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But if there's hyperglycemia,
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then you might start thinking about some of the
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metabolic causes with this cavitation
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phenomenon of chorea.
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Now, what are these metabolic causes?
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Well, there's growing interest in the association of
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chorea and nonketotic hyperglycemia
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in type II diabetes mellitus.
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This is interesting because patients who
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are chronically ketotic, the ketones,
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serve as food for the brain and are probably
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preventative for certain neurodegenerative
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disorders like Alzheimer's disease.
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So, ketotic low-grade hyperglycemia
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may be preventative for certain types of dementia,
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but nonketotic hyperglycemia
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and type II diabetes mellitus,
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places the patient at risk for chorea,
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especially if the patient is of Asian ethnic background.
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And I've seen this
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particularly in people of Filipino descent.
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Now, if the patient presents with chorea
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or chorea and ballism,
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they usually are not obtunded.
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They don't have loss of consciousness,
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whereas the other subset of individuals
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with non ketotic hyperglycemia
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and severe ketotic hyperglycemia,
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may have loss of consciousness.
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The typical findings in patients with
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hyperglycemia and this presentation of chorea
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includes microhemorrhage
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in the basal ganglia distribution.
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Let's move on, shall we?
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