Interactive Transcript
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This is a 4-year-old, Dr. Shupack,
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that complaints of headaches, has speech delay,
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and weirdly,
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I don't think we are ever able to figure it out,
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has a left facial palsy.
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Which didn't really fit well with the imaging,
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but we do have a very large mass.
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And as discussed in other vignettes,
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one of the first things you want to do is decide,
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is it extra-axial
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or is it intra-axial?
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If it's intra-axial, it may be
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come from the brainstem or from the hypothalamus.
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Clearly, that's not the case.
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There is a plain of separation between it and the brain stem.
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But on the other hand, we also want to decide,
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is it of pituitary origin?
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Or is it a suprasellar mass coming down?
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And when you look very carefully here
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and we scroll around a little bit,
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there is pituitary tissue that's enhancing.
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A little bit U or J-shaped in the pituitary fossa,
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separate from the lesion.
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So, the lesion most likely came from
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the top down and grew into the sella,
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grew down behind the clivus,
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marginated by the membrane of Liliequist,
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and it is not equal in signal intensity
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to cerebrospinal fluid.
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Doesn't have calcium in it.
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Looks like a big protonation cystic mass.
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It's bright, but not like cerebrospinal fluid.
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Look at the T1 inversion recovery axial image.
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It's as bright as the white matter.
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Although, clearly, it is not white matter.
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So, it has a very proteinaceous or blood tinge
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or machine oil type of appearance.
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And this is typical in a 4-year-old of adamantinoma,
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the craniopharyngioma, which this is.
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These are currently the first two decades of life and they
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often present as this patient does,
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as we'll see later on when we talk about surgery
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in a separate vignette,
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signs of increased intracranial pressure.
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They have visual disturbances.
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I'm sure this child has a visual field cut.
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It's highly likely these patients,
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with this size craniopharyngioma,
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will have some element of pituitary hypofunction.
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They may get indirect stock effect with a
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little bit of prolactin elevation.
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The TSH could be low.
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So this could be a catastrophic scenario.
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And occasionally, these can even rupture,
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like dermoids, and lead to chemical meningitis.
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So, this is the adenomatous form of craniopharyngioma.
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The other type is the papillary form of craniopharyngioma.
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And in a separate vignette,
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let's talk about how to tackle this huge lesion.
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