Interactive Transcript
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This patient presented with a classic history of change
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in mental status.
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The bane of the radiologist's existence,
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at least the neuroradiologist.
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So, let's scroll through this case.
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So, this is a patient who has a
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very large bilateral lesion,
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and it has heterogeneous signal
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intensity on FLAIR image,
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including mass effect on the frontal horn
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of the right lateral ventricle.
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As we look at it on diffusion-weighted scan,
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we see the vast majority of this is...
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on the ADC map, is showing T2 shine through,
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although there is a periphery of dark signal intensity
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which might suggest cytotoxic edema.
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At this point,
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we really don't know what this might be.
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The leading thought would be a glioblastoma
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that may be crossing the corpus callosum,
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which appears to be expanded.
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Let's look at the postgadolinium enhanced images.
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This is a 3D gradient echo T1-weighted scan.
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And what is curious about this lesion is that it has
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that peripheral pattern of contrast
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enhancement of an incomplete rim.
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Not only that,
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but what looked like two separate lesions can be seen to
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be joining here across the corpus callosum as a single,
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intact,
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large right greater than left lesion.
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On our coronal image,
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although there is motion artifact,
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that persistent peripheral incomplete rim of enhancement
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is identified,
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leading one to be less sure that this represents a
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neoplasm and more likely represents
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tumefactive demyelinating disorder.
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The next step would be to pull down
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our perfusion-weighted scans.
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This is cerebral blood volume corrected.
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And on this grayscale,
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what we see is that the ventricles
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are dark in signal intensity,
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showing low cerebral blood volume.
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The gray matter is red in color,
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which is our marker for something that has high cerebral
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blood volume.
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As we get to our lesion,
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we see that it is predominantly purple, not red,
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and therefore has low cerebral blood volume.
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And that would be distinctly unusual for a
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high-grade astrocytoma.
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For that reason,
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we would suggest instead that this represents a
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tumefactive demyelinating lesion,
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which was confirmed at surgery.
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