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Focal Splenium Demyelination

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This was a patient who is being evaluated

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for nuance at epilepsy,

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for which they had recently started antiepileptic drugs.

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As you scroll through the case

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with the FLAIR image,

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the T2-weighted scan and the

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diffusion-weighted scan,

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what one sees,

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especially well demonstrated on

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the diffusion-weighted scan to the right,

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is an area of abnormal signal intensity within

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the splenium of the corpus callosum.

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This is not so well identified on the FLAIR image,

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as better seen on the T2-weighted scan,

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but certainly the diffusion-weighted scan

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is pretty striking.

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We look for the ADC map of the same patient,

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and you can see the dark signal intensity of the

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cytotoxic edema of the splenium

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of the corpus callosum.

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I'm referring to this dark signal intensity on

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the ADC map,

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corresponding to the DWI signal intensity change,

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and you note that the FLAIR images are not

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as dramatic, but it is present there.

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As we scroll through the rest of the scan,

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we really see relatively little on the FLAIR

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and the rest of the diffusion-weighted scan.

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There's a little bit of high signal intensity in

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the periphery of the splenium

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as it goes out into the forceps minor...

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forceps major there.

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Focal splenium demyelination and cytotoxic edema

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elicits a broad differential diagnosis.

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Within that differential diagnosis,

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we include seizures...

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epilepsy can do it,

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but in addition,

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administration and institution of antiepileptic drugs,

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particularly Keppra drugs,

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can lead to a focal area of splenium

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cytotoxic edema demyelination.

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So, both the institution and withdrawal of Keppra

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related antiepileptic drugs are responsible for

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splenium demyelination examples.

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However,

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the splenium may also be involved in cases

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of ischemic injury to the white matter.

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This would be either on a dominant anterior

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cerebral artery or a posterior cerebral

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artery focal infarction.

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That's pretty unusual not to have some

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cortical involvement, however.

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We also see focal splenium involvement in cases

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of trauma where there is diffuse axonal injury

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injuring the splenium.

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Strangely enough,

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that diffuse axonal injury from trauma

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can lead to cytotoxic edema.

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There are multiple other causes of

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focal splenium demyelination,

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including things such as hepatorenal syndrome.

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You can see it sometimes with posterior

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reversible encephalopathy syndrome or PRES,

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and you may also see it in patients who have

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progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy,

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but usually it's much more extensive than this.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Trauma

Neuroradiology

Metabolic

MRI

Iatrogenic

Drug related

Brain

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