Interactive Transcript
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This is a 51-year-old gentleman who
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was engaged in a six-day fast
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and presented to the emergency room
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with lightheadedness.
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He was subsequently transferred
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to Johns Hopkins for treatment of hyponatremia.
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The MR scan shows a FLAIR image that is
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remarkable for abnormal signal intensity
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within the pons,
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and to a lesser extent,
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the deep white matter of the corona
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radiata and centrum semiovale.
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And this is seen also on the T2-weighted scan.
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Again, we tend to emphasize
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the T2-weighted scan for posterior fossa
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and brain stem abnormalities.
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And you can see this lesion fairly well
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on the FLAIR,
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as well as the T2-weighted scan.
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In looking at the ADC map,
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we note that the patient does not show evidence
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of restricted diffusion.
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In point of fact,
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this area is a little bit brighter in
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signal intensity within the pons.
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The patient had administration of gadolinium,
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as well as an MRA.
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The MRA was unremarkable.
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They were looking for vertebra
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basilar artery insufficiency,
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and both the intracranial and neck MRA
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looked fine.
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On the post-gadolinium-enhanced scans,
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you can see that there is this unusual
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triangular-shaped area of enhancement
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in the central aspect of the pons.
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And this is what I'm referring to here.
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It's sort of almost got a
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little triangular shape,
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which corresponds to the signal intensity
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abnormality seen on the FLAIR
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and on the T2-weighted scans.
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In looking at the history,
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turns out that the patient had been treated for
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hyponatremia associated with the fasting
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at the outside hospital,
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and the sodium had been taken from 124
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to 144 in the course of 24 hours.
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That's a little bit too rapid for
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the correction of hyponatremia,
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and this leads to the diagnosis
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of osmotic demyelination.
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I use the term osmotic demyelination rather than
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central pontine myelinolysis,
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because we now understand
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that there are many different
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manifestations of osmotic demyelination,
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which include extra pontine myelinolysis.
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Curiously,
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extra pontine myelinolysis may affect the fibers
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that connect the gray matter
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of the basal ganglia.
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So it may actually look like a deep gray matter
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lesion when we're dealing with extra pontine myelinolysis.
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So, although the common vernacular
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is CPM or Central Pontine Myelinolysis,
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the term that is favored is
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osmotic demyelination,
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which is due to any number of corrections
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of abnormal electrolytes.
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We think about it with regard to sodium,
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but also potassium.
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Dysmetabolism can also lead
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to osmotic demyelination.
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There are different patterns of osmotic
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demyelination that can occur.
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This one is one of the classic forms with
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the central aspect of the pons.
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But I've also seen osmotic demyelination,
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which involves the entirety of the central
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aspect of the pons but spares
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the corticospinal tract.
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