Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Shupek.
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We've got a 22-year-old young woman who has a mass,
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a coronal T1-weighted image, non-contrast.
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It's a large mass facing the ventricles,
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a coronal T2 fast spine echo,
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and a coronal contrast-enhanced MRI.
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Our mass kind of has the shape of a snowman,
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sort of a figure of eight.
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You just trace it kind of looks like this.
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And that figure-of-eight appearance is very typical
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of a pituitary macroadenoma. Now, you might say,
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well, what about a meningioma?
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Well, meningiomas are kind of rock hard.
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They're very firm,
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so they tend not to have this wasted appearance
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because they're not soft,
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so they don't get constricted or restricted
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by the diaphragma sellae.
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As I scroll through these images for our viewing
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audience of physicians and colleagues,
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you see that the mass has a cystic component.
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We're going to talk about that in the differential
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diagnosis section. Don't see any calcification yet,
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although we do see kind of a fluid-fluid level or
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a blood-fluid level or a protein-fluid level.
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And that's worth discussing because you could
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have some blood inside the lesion,
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which would be a potential concern for pituitary
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apoplexy. And the lesion is very large.
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It has both intrasellar components
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and suprasellar components.
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And one of the first things you need to do when
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you look at a pituitary mass is decide,
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did it arise from the top and come down or
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did it arise from the sella and go up?
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And then of course, you want to look medio-laterally.
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Does it go off to the side?
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Is it invading the cavernous sinus?
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And we've given you many criteria
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for that in other vignettes.
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In keeping with kind of a formula for looking
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at these when they're so big like this,
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then you just go to the presellar area.
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So you might go to, say,
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a sagittal projection and say, okay,
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does it go into the tuberculum sellae?
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Does it go into the planum sphenoidale
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or the limbus sphenoidale? Alice,
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let me blow this up a little bit just
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so we can see it a little better.
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It's not our best sagittal image,
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but I think you get the point.
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There isn't much presellar or anterior extension.
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And then you ask yourself, okay,
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does it go in the middle fossa?
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Does it encroach on the brainstem?
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Does it go down? Is there an infrasellar component?
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And there certainly is bowing of the floor of the
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sella. It doesn't invade the clivus.
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That's important, and it isn't retroclival.
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So that's the basic approach to this lesion.
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I'll scroll it again for you in the coronal
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projection so you can see its posterior extension
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and its anterior extension and its massive
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encroachment on the optic apparatus.
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You say to yourself, okay, where is it?
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It's in here somewhere.
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And the other thing you have to ask yourself is,
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okay, what's it doing to the ventricles?
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Is there obstructive hydrocephalus?
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And that's going to be relevant surgically.
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Yes, there is. Now,
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we do have a T2-weighted image.
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Let's take a look.
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Look at the T2 appearance of this lesion in the
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sagittal and in the coronal projection again,
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and you see that fluid-fluid level once more,
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and the dependent level is really dark.
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So that pushes me towards it being blood as
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opposed to protein. The darker it is,
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the more likely it is to be intracellular
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deoxyhemoglobin and met-hemoglobin and maybe
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even some siderosis from blood.
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So,
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like blood as opposed to simple protein for this
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blood-fluid level. So we've got a huge mass.
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I think both of us would decide that it has
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an intrasellar origin because, I mean,
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where is the sella if it was from above?
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Going down,
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at least you'd see a little plane between
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the mass and the sella turcica.
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Now, the sella turcica can look like this,
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and sometimes even the sella turcica will be J-shaped,
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which is a variation that we haven't really
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talked about in our variants section,
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but it may look like this, and
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that can be normal as well.
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And some people will confuse that for partial empty
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sella, but there isn't either one of those.
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There's no plane of separation
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between this and the sella.
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So this almost has to be an intrasellar mass.
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And you say to yourself, well,
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what kind of mass could it be?
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Well, with cystic components, you say to yourself,
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could it be a craniopharyngioma?
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But it's not starting supercellar,
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it's starting in intrasellar. There's no calcification,
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so craniopharyngioma is not a very good choice.
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And this is going to be a macroadenoma.
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And we're going to talk about what happened to this
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22-year-old woman who had an elevated prolactin and
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who also has cerebral palsy and some other findings
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in the clinical section. So let's get to it.
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Shall we? Sure.
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