Interactive Transcript
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This is a 45-year-old patient who was on
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medications for the chemotherapy
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for testicular carcinoma.
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The FLAIR scan and the T2-weighted scan
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are being presented.
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As we scroll from the posterior fossa,
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we see on T2-weighted scan that things
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look pretty good.
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However,
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once we extend into the supratentorial white matter,
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we notice that there is abnormal signal
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intensity in the periphery of the occipital
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and parietal lobes,
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and coursing further in superiorly,
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we see the involvement
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of the frontal lobes as well.
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This involvement,
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which is symmetric from side to side
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and has a posterior predilection,
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is characteristic of
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Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome.
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As described previously,
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there are many medications that can cause PRES,
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Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome,
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and withdrawal of these medications usually will
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resolve the PRES within a matter of weeks,
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and that is demonstrated on the MRI scan.
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Within a matter of days,
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usually, the patient is already
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showing clinical improvement.
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So the medications that we are particularly
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concerned with are Cyclosporine, Tacrolimus,
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FK 509, Ara-A, Ara-C.
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You may also see this with Tysabri,
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which is one of the medications that is
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associated with multiple sclerosis treatment.
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But there are any number of medications
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that can lead to PRES,
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and you just have to look them up.
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By and large,
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they are chemotherapeutic agents
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and immunosuppressive agents,
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as well as some of the medications
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used for infection.
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So with this involvement that is bilateral and symmetrical,
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we're going to think about PRES.
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The other thing that can simulate PRES is one
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of these reversible vasoconstrictive syndromes.
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This is an entity in which a patient presents
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with a thunderclap headache,
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and again,
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has wide swings in the blood pressure and may be
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associated with atypical subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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By atypical subarachnoid hemorrhage,
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I mean hemorrhage that is out in the periphery
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rather than at the basal cisterns.
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Certainly, when we think of thunderclap headache
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with subarachnoid hemorrhage
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of the basal cisterns,
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we worry about aneurysm perforation and aneurysm
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bleeding and aneurysm rupture as the source
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for that severe headache associated
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with subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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The subarachnoid hemorrhage that's occurring
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with reversible vasoconstrictive syndrome is
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usually more in the periphery and is not
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at the basal cisterns and therefore,
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is less concerning for a patient who
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has an aneurysm bleed.
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However,
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this may lead to white matter changes that
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are mediated through the hypertension
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and vasoregulatory mechanism.
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Cerebral vasoconstrictive system
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that's reversible,
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is more commonly seen in women and actually
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has a very good prognosis.
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In general,
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the patient does not have long term negative
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consequences from the prognosis.
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And similarly,
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early treatment of PRES leads to reversal of
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the encephalopathy and return to normal health.
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