Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Schupak,
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we have a 30-year-old woman with a known suprasellar tumor
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or mass. And I'm here with an experienced neurosurgeon,
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the big Kahuna. Let's talk about the Big Kahuna briefly,
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which is macroadenoma. We're not in the pituitary gland.
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We're suprasellar.
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So we can get rid of that one and talk about
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the other components of the Big Five.
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We're hunting in Africa together: leopard, lion, elephant, cape,
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buffalo, and rhino. We've got macroadenoma.
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It's not meningioma. It's not sacular aneurysm wrong signal,
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no pulsation mismapping. It's not pilocytic astrocytoma.
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That's a possibility.
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Could it be coming from the Hypothalamic region?
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Although there is a plane of separation right here and
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this solid mass in the suprasellar region cranio.
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The fifth one of the Big Five is likely.
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And if it is a cranio,
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it's going to be the solid papillary variety of cranio
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and you've seen in a younger individual.
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Accompanying vignette, the adamantinomatous form of cranio,
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which is more cystic. So this one is solid.
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If it is a cranio, it's likely to be papillary.
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What is it? Right, well,
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we've been focusing earlier on the initial diagnosis,
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but if you're going to do cela,
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I think one of your most common indications for ordering
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a cellar study is not the initial diagnosis,
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but they've been treated and they want to know how they did.
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Sure. How's this patient doing?
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And this one is kind of a treasure trove of treatment.
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How's she doing? Well, let's look at a couple of things here.
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So we got a shunt apparatus here, and in fact,
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you got two shunt tubes.
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So why are there two shunt tubes?
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Well, they're working. Two is better than one.
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Well, no, if it was working, there'd only be one.
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Okay, that's not a good sign.
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You got one that's kind of over in the thalamus,
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and so the tip is there.
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Now, there might still be some holes out here,
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but probably was not working quite as well as it needed to.
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Mind if I put a little dot on the tip right over here,
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just so everybody can see it?
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Right there.
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There's the tip of one of the shunts in the wrong place.
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Hang on. Let me just close that out for you.
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Go ahead. Okay. So we got another shunt tube.
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Now, this is heading for the frontal horn.
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So that's in a little better position,
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although it's kind of
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so that's probably got holes exposed.
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So that may be working.
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But could you point to that shunt in the axial right there?
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Okay. Cross-reference it.
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And so here it's the tube coming right up here.
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Got you. Okay.
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But there is an asymmetry here,
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so it may very well be that this is getting drained more
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than this. So I'd have to keep an eye on this one,
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make sure this ventricle is not getting trapped.
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Okay. So that's one thing to talk about,
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is how is our shunt working?
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Sure. Now, another issue is so this was treated,
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and we've already talked about some approaches,
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but what's this action up here?
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Okay. Was this a shunt tube that was put in?
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And I think the answer to that is no.
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I think what happened here is there's a craniotomy over here,
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and then there's an area of encephalomalacia. Leading to where? To the ventricle.
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So there was a transfrontal approach to the ventricle taken
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to try to remove as much of this lesion as possible.
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Looks like they hollowed out a little bit right in the middle.
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Maybe they did put your arrow right over there,
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but it's kind of in the third ventricle.
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It's going to be very hard to reach by this approach,
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so I don't know how successful it was.
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Now,
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there's actually two approaches you could take to the ventricle.
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One is this transfrontal, okay?
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Which is what happened here.
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The other would be transcollosal,
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which actually might have given you a little better shot
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at this tumor. So you can see they didn't get it out.
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Now, I don't know, maybe there was some here before.
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So this is another approach to add.
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We talked about the pterional approach.
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You talked about the transphenoidal approach.
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Pterional from the side, transphenoidal from underneath.
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So this is an option transventricular.
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Now, you need dilated ventricles to do this approach.
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So they probably were dilated at some point okay.
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To give you some room.
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That's why they shunted them.
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Right?
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But at any rate, there's a bit of tumor left,
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but they got some kind of decompression hydrocephalus.
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Although, once again,
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I think the fact that there is differential drainage
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is something we might want to keep an eye on.
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Make sure this is not bigger next time we look at it and suggest
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that it should be looked at to make
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sure that this lateral ventricle,
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which is not getting trapped and they say there's a
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transfrontal. So they're going to want to know, how did they do?
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Well, we got to know what it looked like beforehand,
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but they probably removed some.
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But they do have decompression,
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at least of the ventricular system,
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and there's no transappendimal spread.
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Okay,
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so there's been some treatment here that's at least been
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effective. Sure. Getting the old scan, as usual, is critical.
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The optic apparatus is spared.
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I'm going to ask you one silly question
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and then make two points,
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and I know it might be silly.
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When you go transcallosal, do you actually have to cut the corpus callosum?
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Absolutely. You do? Yeah.
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And you can do that in the anterior portion.
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You can make about a 1 CM
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it's. Very similar sort of right at the coronal suture,
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a craniotomy and the midline.
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Now,
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the thing about the midline is
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it's actually a great approach, gives you a great exposure,
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but the problem is the anterior cerebrals.
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Okay? So if you're thinking about something like this,
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where they might be thinking about a transcallosal approach,
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really be conscious of where are the anterior cerebrals,
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because that's the biggest complication of of it.
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Because if you have an azygos anterior cerebral,
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a single anterior cerebral, they can damage cerebral artery.
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Okay. Because they can't mobilize it.
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Sure. So if they're looking for two of them,
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they're going to try to spread them or move them
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over out of the way so they don't damage that.
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So if you think that it's something
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that for a transcallosal approach,
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really looking for the configuration and location of the
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anterior cerebrals is going to be really
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essential to the surgeon. Sure.
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And it might be prudent to do an MRA to help
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you out with the vascular anatomy.
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Two quick points in the coronal projection.
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It's rather surprising. It's actually not that surprising.
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Mildly surprising that this papillary craniopharyngioma has very
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scant little enhancement on contrast-enhanced coronal MRI.
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You see the nice tapering, by the way, of the pituitary stalk,
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little chubbier at the top, thin at the bottom.
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And then in the axial projection,
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you can see the lesion is pretty solid,
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as most papillary craniopharyngiomas are,
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in contrast to the adamantinomatous variant.
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And then finally, when you look at the diffusion image,
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there's no diffusion restriction,
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and you wouldn't expect there to be in a lesion like this.
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So that concludes our discussion of this post-surgical papillary
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craniopharyngioma. Ready to move on to the next case.
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All right, let's go.
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