Interactive Transcript
0:01
Dr. Schupack, I've turned to you many times,
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you know, to discuss with you my consternation
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about the pituitary stalk.
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You know, there's a lot of subjectivity
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in evaluating its size, its thickness,
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its enhancement pattern.
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I'm starting out with a coronal subtracted dynamic
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T1 high-resolution MR.
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You could see we're in the front of the gland.
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We're catching a little bit of the pars tuberalis
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and then this little enhancement
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in the gland called the pituitary tuft,
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which I know you're going to talk about,
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but I don't want folks to get confused with this pars
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tuberalis because it's kind of nodular looking and your
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first reaction is, "Oh, okay, there's a bump there."
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The pituitary stalk is thickened or enlarged.
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You really have to go more posterior to look at the stalk.
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You're still in the tuberalis right here,
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and now you're in the stalk.
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It's more linear.
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And I'd like to talk about that anatomy right
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in profile in the stalk, in the sagittal projection.
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So let's talk about things like deviation and tilt and
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tapering and maybe even tumors that occur around the stalk.
1:01
Right.
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Well, you know, we tend to focus on the gland,
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but there are processes that can affect primarily the stalk.
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Okay? Such as Lymphocytic Hypophysitis,
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Eosinophilic granuloma,
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and there's some tumors there, pituicytoma.
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So the question is,
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is this stalk normal or is it one of those things?
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Okay, so how do we make that distinction?
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Well, first of all thing you're going to be looking
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at for first is deviation of the stalk.
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But, you know, that can be a pretty common physiologic finding.
1:32
Sure. So when you say deviation, you mean to one side.
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Yeah, it's a little bit tilted in this view.
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Let me take this from you and just get you back in swing here.
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So it's a little bit tilted in this view.
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So the question is, "Well, is that a problem?"
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Well, try to correlate with other things.
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Dr. Pomeranz measured the tuft.
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So if there's something pushing it,
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we should probably see some other evidence of mass effect.
1:53
In the gland you mean?
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In the gland, correct.
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So is it being pushed?
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There's nothing in the suprasellar space pushing it.
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The other thing is enhancement of the stalk is a
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normal finding, even avid enhancement.
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Sure.
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Okay.
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But I think one of the main things that we can use is the
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stalk should be tapered. Okay?
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Wider at the top, coming down.
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So these things that we talked about,
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lymphocytic, hypophysitis, EG,
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they're going to give you a nodular bumpy stalk and it's
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not going to preserve that taper from top to bottom.
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Okay. You're going to see it widened.
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So it's wider up top and irregular.
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It should be triangular and linear as you come down.
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Right. I think you could see that here.
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So the configuration is going to help you more than
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the enhancement because the enhancement is normal.
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And are there other things elsewhere that
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suggest something's going on. Okay?
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So I would say that this stalk is probably physiologic
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avidly enhancing but with preservation of that taper.
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So the bottom line is it's going
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to be chubbier at the top.
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It's going to taper as you come down in both projections.
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It's tapering this way
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and it's also tapering this way.
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It's not nodular.
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We allow for some deviation to one side or the other.
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We allow for some tilting in either direction.
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Those don't bother us as long as no other
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ancillary findings are present.
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And you certainly don't want to overcall a pituitary
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abnormality based on those individual variations and
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criteria we described. Let's move on, shall we?
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