Interactive Transcript
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This was another child who presented
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with acute neurologic deficits.
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Now, there is a broad differential diagnosis
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for a child with acute neurologic deficits.
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We think about a seizure disorder.
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We think about complicated migraines.
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We think about potential
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poisoning or drug use, etc.
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In this case, we looked at the DWI images.
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And we saw almost immediately that there were multiple
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areas of high signal intensity on the diffusion
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weighted imaging that indicated that there were strokes.
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And most of these strokes seemed to
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be in the watershed distribution.
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This is part of the white matter
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watershed on the right side.
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There are some areas in the
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anterior cerebral distribution.
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But the majority of the abnormality
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was in the watershed distribution.
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Here was an area that was
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involving the top of the caudate.
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So, as with whenever we see these abnormalities
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on the DWI, we want to confirm on the A
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DC map that they are indeed dark areas.
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So here is the low signal intensity on the
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ADC map—apparent diffusion coefficient—
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decreased, corresponding to the bright
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signal intensity on the DWI. And as we went
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further superior,
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all these areas corresponded to dark
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areas representing acute infarction.
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Remember, if it's bright on the ADC map,
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it's more likely to be vasogenic edema.
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So we have bilateral infarctions in a watershed
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distribution, predominantly in a child.
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So.
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Did this patient have a cardiac arrest?
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Did this patient have a hypoperfusion
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episode, either due to dehydration?
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Could it have been a patient who drowned?
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Again, we would be asking the clinicians. We're on
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the phone already because we have a positive DWI,
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informing the clinician that the patient has a stroke.
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We would go to the FLAIR scan if we wanted
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to look and see whether they were bright.
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So these are greater than six hours old,
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because we can see them on the FLAIR scan.
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And then we would look at the susceptibility
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maps to look for hemorrhage in the
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strokes—no dark blood products identified.
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And then we would look at the MRA if it was available.
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In this case, although I don't have the
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MRA to show you, this is a patient
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who had Moyamoya syndrome.
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Moyamoya syndrome is the entity in which there
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is vascular narrowing of the distal internal
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carotid artery going into the M1 or A1 segments.
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And when it is Moyamoya disease,
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it is a bilateral process.
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We have a bilateral process because of the
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stenosis of the distal internal carotid artery.
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It leads to.
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Areas of watershed disease, watershed ischemia from
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the narrowing of the distal internal carotid arteries.
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The fact that this is bilateral suggests
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Moyamoya disease. Moyamoya syndrome, more
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likely, is a unilateral process, and it's not
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that disease entity, which is a bilateral,
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idiopathic, sometimes congenital genetic disease.
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With Moyamoya syndrome, it can be secondary
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to things like a dissection of a blood
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vessel, or severe atherosclerosis of a blood
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vessel, or hypoplasia of the vessel, generally
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as in neurofibromatosis type 1.61 00:02:52,620 --> 00:02:56,130 We have a bilateral process because of the
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stenosis of the distal internal carotid artery.
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It leads to.
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Areas of watershed disease, watershed ischemia from
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the narrowing of the distal internal carotid arteries.
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The fact that this is bilateral suggests
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Moyamoya disease. Moyamoya syndrome, more
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likely, is a unilateral process, and it's not
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that disease entity, which is a bilateral,
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idiopathic, sometimes congenital genetic disease.
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With Moyamoya syndrome, it can be secondary
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to things like a dissection of a blood
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vessel, or severe atherosclerosis of a blood
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vessel, or hypoplasia of the vessel, generally
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as in neurofibromatosis type 1.
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