Interactive Transcript
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This was a patient who presented with the
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combination of imaging findings of
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optic neuritis and transverse myelitis.
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The patient had an MRI of the brain,
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of the spine, as well as of the orbits.
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Let's look at the brain MRI
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with the FLAIR scan to the left.
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So in this situation,
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what we have is a patient who doesn't readily
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demonstrate very many demyelinating
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white matter lesions at all.
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If we look at the periventricular subcortical regions,
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nothing much is being demonstrated.
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We do see a lot of artifact from patient motion.
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If we look at the T2-weighted scan,
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we see a lesion,
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a linear lesion in the cerebellum.
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This is an old stroke.
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It's not a pattern of demyelination.
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It goes all the way out to the
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periphery of the cerebellum.
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But we do see some indistinct
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high signal intensity within the pons
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and in retrospect,
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some high signal intensity at the
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cervical medullary junction
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and posterior medulla.
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The next thing that was scanned was the spine.
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On the T2-weighted spine image,
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you can see a white matter lesion
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of the spinal cord,
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a spinal cord lesion which is quite extensive.
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Let me just magnify this a little bit more.
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The area of abnormality extends
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from the C1 level
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through the spinal cord
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down to the top of C4.
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So this is longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis,
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a long segment disease.
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Not what one would typically see in
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a patient with multiple sclerosis.
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It looks like it's a solitary lesion.
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Let's look on the axial scans.
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On the axial scans,
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you see that the lesion does
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indeed extend from C1,
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from centrally to the right
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side of the spinal cord,
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going down the spinal cord to the top of C4.
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And then, we have a more normal appearance
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to the spinal cord.
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As we went into the thoracic spine,
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no additional lesions were identified.
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Right now, we have just a few lesions in the
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infratentorial portion of the brain,
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and we have a lesion in the spinal cord,
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which is a long, extensive,
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longitudinally extensive white matter lesion.
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Let's look at the post-gadolinium-enhanced
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examination of the optic nerves.
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We follow the optic nerves backward,
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and as we proceed through the optic canal,
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we start to see something showing contrast enhancement,
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representing the left optic nerve
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in its prechiasmal portion.
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So, this is abnormal enhancing
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left optic nerve through the optic canal
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to the prechiasmal optic nerve
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representing left optic neuritis.
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We now have fulfilled our criteria for
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neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder.
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We should also check to see the spinal cord
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lesion to see whether it shows
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contrast enhancement.
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On post-gadolinium scans,
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just going to magnify once again,
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you can see that there is faint contrast
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enhancement in the uppermost portion
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of that demyelinating process.
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So this is monophasic disease in that you have
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optic neuritis at the same time as enhancing
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transverse myelitis spinal cord lesion
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in a patient who has neuromyelitis
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optica spectrum disorder.
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