Interactive Transcript
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This is a child who presented with shunt
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failure to the emergency room
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with no prior examinations.
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At this juncture for shunt failure,
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we're typically performing MR
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sequences with HASTE fast T2-weighted scans
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in the sagittal axial and coronal plane,
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and we don't necessarily perform CT scan.
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This study, however,
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was performed in 2014 before
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we implemented an MR protocol
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for evaluation for children with hydrocephalus.
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So, let's look at the CT scan.
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What we see with the CT scan is a patient
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who has bilateral ventriculostomy catheters
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with bilateral areas of calcification in the
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basal ganglia region,
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as well as in the periphery.
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You see some calcification
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in the periphery here,
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and the patient has cysts within the white
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matter in the parenchyma of the brain.
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Now, on initial blush,
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we might consider torch infections,
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which may lead to the calcifications in
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the periventricular region.
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However, this wouldn't necessarily account for some
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of the more peripheral calcifications.
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The combination of the calcifications
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associated with parenchymal cysts
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might lead us to worry about a
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dysmyelinating disorder that would also have
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associated calcifications and cysts.
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And the dysmyelination might be brought up
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by the fact that there is low density
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within the white matter
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bilaterally in this patient.
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So, we'd be considering a leukodystrophy with
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calcification and cysts
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versus a torch infection.
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This patient subsequently
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went on to MRI scanning.
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Looking at the FLAIR scan,
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we see the large parenchymal cysts,
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which has signal intensity,
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which is not the same as the
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CSF of the ventricle,
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and we see that there actually are multiple
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ones of these various cysts.
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In addition,
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we have the white matter disease that is
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predominantly in the temporal
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lobe and frontal lobe,
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and we see the residual from the
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ventriculostomy catheterization.
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The calcifications are seen in the basal
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ganglia, the thalamus, etc.
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And this patient has a diagnosis of
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leukoencephalopathy with cysts
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and calcification.
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It is one of the more obscure of the
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leukodystrophies that can occur,
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and the white matter disease may be diffuse
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or it may be more selective to the temporal
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lobes or even in the cerebellum.
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Here you see that there is involvement of
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the pons, but not so much involved
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and of the central cerebellum.
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This used to be called Labrune syndrome,
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but we now refer to it as leukoencephalopathy,
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with parenchymal cysts and calcifications.
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