Interactive Transcript
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This is a 52-year-old who was in a motor vehicle
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collision and started seizing
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in the emergency room.
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They instituted antiepileptic drug therapy,
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and after a CT scan, sent a patient for an MRI,
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the CT scan was relatively normal.
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So let's look at the MRI.
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We have the FLAIR, the T2, and the ADC map.
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As we scroll through the images,
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looking initially at a haste T2-weighted scan,
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because the patient was moving.
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We see a relatively normal-looking FLAIR scan
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until we get to the top of the corpus callosum,
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where there appears to be abnormal
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signal intensity.
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This is also seen in the splenium
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of the corpus callosum,
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better seen on the T2-weighted scan
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than the FLAIR scan.
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If we divert our eyes to the ADC map,
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we see a similar area as previously described on
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the most recent case of low signal intensity
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on the ADC map, reflecting cytotoxic edema.
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Where we to look at the diffusion
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weighted images,
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we would expect to see the bright signal
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intensity within the splenium
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of the corpus callosum.
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Now, at first blush,
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this may look just like the previous case in
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which we saw the focal area of splenium
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demyelination associated with the institution
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of antiepileptic drugs.
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However,
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we have to deal with the top of the corpus callosum
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that we are seeing here,
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where there appears to be abnormal signal
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intensity as well on the diffusion
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weighted scan.
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The other thing for those who have sharp eyes,
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is that on the T2-weighted scan,
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we see a blood fluid level within the occipital
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pole of the left lateral ventricle,
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which is also seen on the B zero map of the
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diffusion-weighted scan.
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At the same time,
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you notice that there is quite a bit of edema in
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the scalp reflecting the patient's trauma.
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At this juncture,
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it's good to refer to the susceptibility
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weighted images,
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and on these susceptibility weighted images,
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we again see the dark signal intensity of the
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blood products in the occipital horn
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of the left lateral ventricle,
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as well as other areas of dark signal intensity
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within the white matter of the occipital
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lobe and the periventricular zone.
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And as we extend higher to the
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top of the corpus callosum,
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we now see very dark signal intensity
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at the top of the corpus callosum.
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So, these focal areas of low signal intensity are
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what I'm referring to at the
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top of the corpus callosum.
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And you see that there is some blood products
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also noted elsewhere in the brain and
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or in the subarachnoid space.
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There's probably some blood in the subarachnoid
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space along the medial aspect of
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the right parietal lobe.
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So this is not secondary to
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the patient's institution of antiepileptic therapy.
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This is splenium demyelination,
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splenium tear on the basis of trauma.
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So while it's true that the patient had
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institution of the antiepileptic drugs
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for the seizure in the emergency room,
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this is more likely because of the presence of
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hemorrhage to represent traumatic splenium
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injury as opposed to demyelination on
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the basis of antiepileptic drug.
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So as you scroll this susceptibility weighted scan,
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you see additional areas of hemorrhage
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in the subarachnoid space,
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as well as at the gray white junction
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on the SWI scan.
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So the SWI scan was very instrumental in
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identifying the source of the splenium
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demyelination and splenium
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injury in this patient.
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A lookalike for splenium demyelination secondary
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to institution or withdrawal
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of antiepileptic drugs.
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