Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Schupack,
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this is a 46-year-old man who was referred in for,
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quote unquote,
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migraine headaches by somebody with general
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medical knowledge. But not a neurologist.
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Not a neurosurgeon.
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Somebody who doesn't really practice avidly
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or consistently in the neural space.
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And we've got an axial T1 non-contrast,
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which I'm going to scroll for.
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You got kind of a weird look of the brainstem right here.
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That's disturbing. And as we keep going,
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maybe there's some extra-axial collections on both sides.
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No maybe about it. They're present.
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The ventricles aren't big.
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And then we have a sagittal here that shows the pituitary
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gland. Since we're in the suprasellar section,
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it's a little juicy for an adult male.
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Adult male. We'd like to see it under seven or 8 mm,
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maybe 6 mm. This one's substantially more than that.
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Maybe the dural venous sinuses and the
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torcular are a little prominent.
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And certainly the clival veins are a little prominent.
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So what's going to be the diagnosis here?
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And how do you explain the fact that you can hardly see
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the pituitary? It looks kind of squishy in there,
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and the pituitary gland looks a little big.
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In fact. Now,
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I'll mag it up a little bit while you're chatting.
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Right. So the patient's there,
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and I think the first question when you see this
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scan is you go and ask the patient, well,
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I heard you had headaches.
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What makes them better? And the answer, I can tell you.
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What it's going to be?
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Oh, they're better when I lie down.
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Boy, when I sit up, horrible.
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Okay. Now, why is that?
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Because mine get better when my spouse is happy with me.
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But go ahead. Yeah, I guess that's occurred occasionally.
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Okay. But anyway, Dr.
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Pomeranz pointed out a number of things.
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One is,
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so we're wondering about hypotension
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with postural headaches.
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So if we can establish that they're postural and the reason
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that we're really highly suspicious is because of this.
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Okay. Remember the Monroe Kelly hypothesis, Dr.T?
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I do remember that from medical school.
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Okay,
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so the volume and pressure in the head is due to three
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components: the soft tissue, the CSF, and the blood.
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Okay? So if one gets smaller, the other gets bigger.
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Okay, so you have something here.
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So this is not going to be hypertension, right?
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Because something sucked the brain down enough to create
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potential space that is going to fill with fluid.
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The extra-axial collections rule out hypertension.
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Right. So we're really working on hypotension,
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I would say.
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The other thing is the suprasellar cisternal effacement,
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right? And the sellar is not empty.
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If anything, it's a little chubby.
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Okay. The pituitary is a little chubby.
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And then the same phenomenon, right?
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Clival veins. Right. So if the pressure is down,
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veins get bigger.
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So you get these prominent and clival veins.
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Now, I think, on the post-contrast,
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just to kind of seal the deal.
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Yeah. So we got a little bit of enhancement, right?
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Your collections. Enhancements of the pachymeninges.
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Of the pachymeninx. Okay,
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so we're kind of on the track here with hypotension.
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Now, then,
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the next question that the clinician is going to ask is,
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well, why? I mean, is there a CSF leak at the skull base?
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Or maybe there was a little trauma or something?
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Sure. Well, the answer is going to be, look at the spine.
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Okay. These are going to be from a spinal source almost.
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You'd think, well, okay, it should be in the head,
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a CSF leak, but it's almost always from the spine.
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And spontaneous ones are going to be due to sort
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of a root chief cyst that is ruptured.
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And sometimes you'll do a scan of the spine and see that
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these people have a bunch of root chief cysts.
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You can't tell exactly which one it is,
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but the source is going to be spinal.
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And the spontaneous ones,
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and I've seen it actually happen from a sneeze.
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But that's such a good point,
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because the findings are in the brain.
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You think, well, let's find the leak in the brain.
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Well, that would be appropriate if it was a post-surgical case.
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Surgical case.
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But you're right, most of these you're right, as usual.
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Most of these happen in the spine
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and often in the lumbar spine.
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But you may have to completely go up and down the spine
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with very high resolution, overlapping 3D sections,
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and then you can reformat them.
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I like to have 50% overlap.
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I like to have 1 mm.
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Yeah, it takes a little bit of time,
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but it's certainly better than trying to do dilogram in
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a patient, and it usually will give you the answer.
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We've got Pachymeningeal enhancement,
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and you can see these extra-axial collections a little
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more clearly. You can see that for a middle-aged man,
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the sella is a little bit juicy.
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And all you have to do to think about the findings here is
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everything is trying to get bigger to fill
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up this space of negative pressure.
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And it can happen all the way up and down the neural axis.
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So when you go in the spine mean,
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sometimes the veins are so massive,
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I have seen them be confused with extra-axial masses.
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And that would be a big surprise for a surgeon to get in.
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And attack some tumor,
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and it turns out to be dilated veins from SIH,
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spontaneous intracranial hypotension.
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Not to be confused with idiopathic intracranial
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hypertension IIH, also known as pseudotumor cerebra.
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