Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Schupack, this is a four-year-old complex case.
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Very large mass. It's a supersellar mass,
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and it's a proven
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adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma.
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The other type is the Papillary type.
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The adamantinomatous type is cystic, may have calcium in it.
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The Papillary type more frequently seen in adults,
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more solid-looking and does have solid-type enhancement.
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This one barely enhances around the outside.
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It's a T1-weighted image.
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We've got a flare here,
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which I know you're going to comment on.
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The ventricles are a little big with
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some periventricular high signal.
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Then there's this funny-looking abnormality that's hanging
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down from the right middle cerebral artery,
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which we don't know what it is.
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The case is absolutely proven.
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And then when we go posteriorly along the back of the lesion,
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we see that there's a developmental venous anomaly in the
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right cerebellar hemisphere and the
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right white matter or linea alba.
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So let's talk about what to do with this and your approach to
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it take over. Well, there's going to be a couple of phases.
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Dr.
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Pomerance has done the first phase that the radiologist
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can help with, which is arriving at a diagnosis.
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We know what that is.
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But really,
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where the radiologist can really be valuable is the next phase
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of figuring out, hey, what has to happen now and how quickly.
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All right,
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so the first thing that your attention is going
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to be drawn to is regardless of the mass,
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you're going to get focused on that.
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But, boy,
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we got an immediate problem right here that's going to deserve
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a phone call, which is obstructive hydrocephalus.
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Now, you can see ventricular capping, all right?
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Now, this is a young patient,
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but you're always seeing vascular disease
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signal around the ventricles.
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But this capping pattern transapendymal spread of CSF.
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The temporal horns are big.
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So this person, before they need anything,
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needs some control of their CSF obstruction,
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whether it be an external ventricular drain or a more
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definitive shunt, depending on what the ultimate plan is.
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But the physician who's taking care of this patient needs to
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know about that before we kind of get to anything else.
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Yeah,
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and you're never going to get capping of that extent in a
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child. Never. Right. Their ventricles are going to be tiny,
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right, in a little kid like this, right?
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Sure. And so giant ventricles.
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So that's issue number one in terms of urgency.
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And what's going to happen before anything else does is making
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sure that while we're all thinking about this thing,
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that this poor child doesn't herniate.
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Okay? Now, so we talked before about the lesion itself,
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and just this is a really good example.
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Huge lesion, right?
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But different than another lesion that we had seen earlier,
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because the cella is not big, okay?
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And there's pituitary tissue.
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You mean the sella turcica, the sella turcica.
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The sella is not enlarged,
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so there's no transphenoidal thing here because
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there's no place to work through.
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Okay.
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And that's just not where
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the action is.
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If you could let me just take over for a minute so I can blow
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it up a little bit so we can show the pituitary gland,
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which is separate from it.
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And the sella really isn't big for the lesion size.
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There's the gland right there.
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There's the gland right there.
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So it is clearly separate from the pituitary gland.
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Sorry, go ahead. Sure. So as far as surgical options.
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So you can't go do anything from the transphenoid approach.
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So it's going to be a transcranial approach of some sort.
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And what are the goals going to be?
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Well, you got a very important goal right here,
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which is decompressing the brainstem.
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Also, this person presented with visual loss,
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so decompressing this portion of it,
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and the chiasm and optic apparatus are in there somewhere.
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This case is so bad that we can't even tell where.
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But trying to get some decompression because this
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in due course is going to kill this person.
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Sure. And brainstem compression is how that might occur.
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Yeah. And just you reminded me,
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one of the signs of craniopharyngioma is the mustache sign,
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where the optic apparatus is draped over the lesion
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as a mustache, seen in the coronal projection.
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But you sort of have a mustache-like phenomenon right here.
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I can draw over it right there.
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Looks a little bit like a downward-turning mustache.
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So I'm sorry. Go ahead.
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And so what is going to help with the thinking
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about what the definitive treatment is?
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So this has an effect on the basilar artery.
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Okay. Now, we were thinking that there's facial weakness,
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but it's a little hard to explain
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because when you get down there,
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we don't really have
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7th and 8th nerve complexes.
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So it may be some sort of brainstem phenomenon that we're
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looking at, but at least we don't have to decompress that.
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But there's retroclival extension. Okay.
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The basilar artery. Meaning if you start taking this out,
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the basilar artery is going to be
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at the end of your dissection.
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You certainly don't want to have a problem with that.
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It's kind of weird because the facial you just drove by the
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facial nerve nucleus right here is the facial colliculus
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bump right in the floor of the fossa.
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Okay. The facial colliculus right there.
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There's nothing there.
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So it's hard to explain why the child has a
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facial nerve palsy, but go ahead.
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Right.
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Middle fossa is a problem.
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And you said that there's a lesion out here.
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I think I would investigate that a little bit.
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Meaning because your approach is probably going to be
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from this side and it's right next to the lesion.
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It may be some unusual manifestation of the lesion itself,
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some sort of daughter cyst.
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I just want to be sure it's not vascular.
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Sure. Okay.
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Because we're going to need to protect this
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middle cerebral complex on our way in.
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And in thinking about it, I don't think it was vascular.
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Now,
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that I'm looking at it in its totality because it
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does match the signal intensity of the lesion.
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It matches it over here.
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I think we briefly considered that it could be aneurysm draped
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down from the M one segment or the M two segment of the
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middle cerebral artery. But the patient had an.
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Eventful resection,
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and nobody reported any vascular lesions other than a
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developmental venous anomaly in the back of a
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cerebellum which was not operated on.
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Okay.
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As I say, in a case like this,
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where there's very obvious abnormality,
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most of my report is about describing the relation of
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the lesion to things that you want to know about.
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For example,
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the anterior cerebral complex kind of riding on top of the
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lesion because that may affect somebody's thinking
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about how they're going to deal with it.
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So very difficult problem.
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What the definitive treatment is going to be is unclear,
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but there's definitely an urgent component to it.
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And then using the information,
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thinking through how you can get there and what might be the
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issues in terms of anatomy going to be really helpful
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to clinicians. Great. One final parting question.
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As a snookie radiologist,
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not a clinician
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with a lesion that's separate from the pituitary gland,
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does that preclude you going from the bottom now
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that you know it's a supercellular mass?
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Well,
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there are extended skull base approaches these days where they
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endoscopic approaches where they actually mobilize
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the pituitary and go through the clivus.
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Wow. Okay, so there could be some things like that.
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But the fact is, unless it's a primarily cellar lesion,
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the cellar is going to be small.
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So here's this giant lesion, tiny little cellar.
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I mean, it's going to be a little bit hard.
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So there could be some role for a skull based approach,
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at least in part of this.
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But classically speaking,
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if you're going to do transphenoidal and
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there's a supercellular component,
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you need kind of a big cellar to work through.
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And this one, say,
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different than the last one that we discussed.
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Right? So that one had giant cellar.
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The thing is into this phenoid is right there in front of you.
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This thing is giant thing with a little tiny hole.
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Going to be tough. Got it.
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All right, well,
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let's move on to our summary vignette on craniopharyngioma,
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shall we?
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