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The Anatomy of Demyelinating Disease

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A brief comment about anatomy.

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So, clearly,

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we're going to be focused on the white

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matter as we talk about demyelinating

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disorders and multiple sclerosis.

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But as I said,

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this has become a disease that we

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understand has both gray matter impact,

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as well as white matter impact.

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And as you saw with the FLAIR post

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contrast seven Tesla scanning,

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even left domingal impact.

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So we may see enhancing leptomeninges,

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we may see enhancing gray matter

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demyelinating plaques,

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and we may see white matter plaques.

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So it behooves us to understand a little

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bit about the various white matter tracts

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that are coursing through the brain.

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And this, for example,

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is just on the left hand side,

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showing the corticospinal tracts and the

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motor tracks going through the brain.

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And also recall that we will have sensory

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tracts that are also going to be

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coursing through the brain.

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And these demyelinating disorders can

1:01

affect anywhere along these tracks.

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So it is a disorder that will affect both

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the supratentorial white matter as well

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as the infratentorial white matter going

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through the brain stem and then

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even into the spinal cord.

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And we look for demyelination in the

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entire central nervous system.

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I want to focus just a moment on the

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Trex in the spinal cord.

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So,

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from our sagittal scan,

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we are usually looking at the spinal cord

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with our T two weighted and STIR pulse

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sequences in a sagittal plane.

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And then, as I mentioned previously,

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in the axial plane,

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we're using fastbane echo T2-weighted

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scan as well as gradient

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echo T2-weighted scan.

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Where should we be looking

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for demyelination? Well,

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as you recall from your days

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looking at anatomy books,

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the spinal cord has central gray matter

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but peripheral white matter tracks.

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So, in general,

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we say that you should be looking along

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the periphery of the spinal cord

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for demyelinating plaques.

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It happens that the posterior

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columns represented here

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in the vesiculus cuniatis and gracilis,

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these posterior columns have a particular

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predilection for demyelination.

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But you will see demyelination

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all over the spinal cord,

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generally sparing the central

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gray matter area.

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One anatomic structure that we should be

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very cognizant about is the

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virchow-robin space.

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The Virchow-Robin space is the CSF space

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that occurs around blood vessels,

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usually small vessels,

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and often the arteries or the veins.

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And this CSF is going to look bright

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on our T2-weighted scan.

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This is the value of FLAIR scanning

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because CSF on FLAIR is dark

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in signal intensity,

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whereas CSF on T2-weighted scan

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is bright in signal intensity.

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Demyelination on FLAIR is bright in signal

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intensity. On T2-weighted scan,

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demyelination is bright.

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So on a T2-weighted scan,

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sometimes you can't tell the difference

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between a perivascular space and

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demyelination, whereas on FLAIR scan,

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because the perivascular space is dark

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but the demyelination is bright,

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it's very helpful.

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So going back to this initial scan that

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I set of scans that I showed at

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the beginning of this session,

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if we look at our T2-weighted scans,

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at the bottom,

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we see all of these bright areas

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throughout the frontal lobes

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that are brightened signal intensity

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on our fastbanecho T2-aid scan.

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However, when we turn to the FLAIR scan,

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many of these bright areas are actually

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dark in signal intensity

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on the FLAIR scan.

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So this little series of dark signal

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intensity in the subinsular region on the

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FLAIR corresponding to the bright

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area on T2-weighted scan,

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these are the perivascular spaces.

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They are dark on FLAIR but bright

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on T2-weighted scan.

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So we cannot rely on bright signal

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intensity on fast beneco T2-aid scan as

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a marker for demyelination. In every case,

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we have to then correlate

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it with the FLAIR scan.

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The areas of demyelination on this FLAIR

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image are actually those periventricular

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zones over here,

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which are bright in signal intensity

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on FLAIR imaging.

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So it's a combination of T2-aid scans

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and FLAIR scans that allow us to

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distinguish between the Virchow-Roban

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perivascular spaces

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versus

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MS and demyelination.

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I want to make one other point,

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and that is that demyelination on FLAIR is

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not as well demonstrated in the brain stem

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as demyelination on T2-weighted scan.

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So the one area where I use T2

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aid imaging more than FLAIR

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is in the brain stem

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and end,

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they're about equal in the cerebellum.

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So you look at the T2-weight

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scan for infratentorial

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and rely on that most for infratentorial

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demyelination.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Neuroradiology

MRI

Brain

Acquired/Developmental

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