Interactive Transcript
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You know, Dr. Shupack,
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the neurohypothesis makes up only about one quarter of
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the pituitary mechanism, and it's got three parts,
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as we've talked about before.
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It's got a stalk, it's got a pars nervosa,
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also known as the posterior lobe,
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and it also has a median eminence,
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which is the very tip or base of the stalk,
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the most proximal portion of the stalk,
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which lies below the tuber cinereum.
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So, in this case,
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we've got kind of a weird thing going on.
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We don't have our normal pituitary bright spot,
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which we said before,
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can be absent at a moment in time in 20% of
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the population, but when it's not there,
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you've got to be concerned about a few things.
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So,
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what's going on here in the sagittal T1-weighted image? Right. So, as Dr.
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Pomerance mentioned,
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we're kind of expecting a bright spot here,
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but what happens if it's gone?
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So, if you didn't believe in the neurohypothesis,
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you will in this case, because it's not gone.
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It's just kind of taking a little trip there,
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going up to the east coast.
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Right. So, here's your mammillary body.
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So, this is an ectopic neurohypothesis,
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and it's usually developmental.
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I think most of the cases described as developmental
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but can be associated with head trauma.
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And if you get a history that says that sella
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and the history is diabetes insipidus,
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this could be a really important finding because,
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remember,
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antidiuretic hormone is part of this
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function of this neurohypothesis.
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So they could have abnormalities of serum
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sodium that's correct. Serum sodium.
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And also even up for pituitary surgery.
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I haven't seen this. Exactly.
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But you can have damage.
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DI is another complication of pituitary surgery.
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So if you see that diabetes insipidus, do they have in
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surgery? What's going on with the neurohypothesis?
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Things that come to mind now,
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there are some associations with this.
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There's a differential. Okay,
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so dermoid could be one thing, a lipoma,
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so it's bright on the T1.
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So things that are bright on T1, you can think of.
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And there are some other things that you should
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look for, such as septooptic dysplasia,
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Kallmann syndrome that can be associated with
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this anomaly. Okay, so when you see this,
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it's kind of a gee-whiz thing,
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but there are some other wheels that should be turning,
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looking for associations and providing a little bit of
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a differential and looking at the clinical setting.
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DI? No DI.
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That's what your clinician is wondering.
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Sure. That's probably the most important thing.
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And we both know that trauma can dislodge this.
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And if somebody has it dislodged with trauma,
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you have to look to see if the stalk is transected.
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You mentioned septo-optic dysplasia.
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Pretty self-explanatory.
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Kallmann syndrome would be hypogonadism with disruption
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of the olfactory apparatus. It's a developmental.
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And one other lesion in the differential diagnosis
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would be small suprasellar cranial,
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but it's too far posterior.
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You're usually right above the pituitary gland or stalk.
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So this is an ectopic position of the
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posterior pituitary gland,
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the pars nervosa component of the posterior apparatus
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seen in a supra and retrocellar position.
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Shall we move on? Yeah.
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