Interactive Transcript
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In my introduction to this topic, I talked about
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the clinical scenario of fever and seizures.
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And said that you want to look for findings of
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meningitis, or encephalitis, or meningoencephalitis.
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The truth is that for most patients with meningitis,
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the CT scan and the MRI scans are stone-cold normal.
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You might occasionally see a case where you do see,
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on gadolinium-enhanced imaging, high signal intensity
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of the meninges in a patient who has meningitis.
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And sometimes you may also see high signal intensity
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in the subarachnoid space on the FLAIR scan, where
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you would expect to have suppression of CSF signal.
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Those would be the findings of
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meningitis, but they are rare.
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This is less than 25% of cases.
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So, really, what we're looking for is the brain
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tissue manifestation of the infection—
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that is, the encephalitis of meningoencephalitis.
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Although AIDS is probably the most common thing that
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we see in the brain with respect to infections of the
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brain that may cause a meningoencephalitis, at this
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juncture, that has become a readily treatable disease,
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and you don't see that coming in through the emergency
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department very often as an acute presentation.
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That's in contrast to this case.
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So, here we have a patient who presented with
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fever and seizures and was not immunocompromised.
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And as we look at this patient's scan, what we see is
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high signal intensity that is localized to the peri-
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insular region and lateral temporal lobe, extending
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to involve the cingulum as well as the hippocampus.
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And we notice that this abnormality is a
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bilateral process where the uncus in the
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medial temporal lobe on the left side is also involved.
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When you look at the diffusion-weighted imaging,
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the patient has some abnormalities here,
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which represent hemorrhages, but there is
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very slight high signal intensity on the DWI
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in the subinsular region on the right side.
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Is that T2 shine-through from this
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abnormality, or is this cytotoxic edema?
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Remember, T2 shine-through is vasogenic edema.
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For that, we need to look at the ADC map.
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We look on the ADC map, and what we see is that
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this signal intensity is actually bright here.
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So this is not infarcted tissue or cytotoxic edema.
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This is T2 shine-through of vasogenic edema in this
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patient who has a bilateral temporal lobe process.
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I would also point out that the
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subarachnoid space of this patient shows
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high signal intensity in the sulci.
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You can see this pretty nicely right here.
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Bright signal intensity over
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the right inferior frontal lobe.
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Contrast that with the normal CSF over this way,
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and going into the subarachnoid space here.
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Here's normal, dark signal on FLAIR.
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Here's bright signal on FLAIR.
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That means that there's an
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abnormality in the subarachnoid space.
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This is indeed an example of a
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patient who had meningoencephalitis.
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Of the cases of meningoencephalitis that favor the
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temporal lobe, the peri-insular region, and the
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cingulum, herpes encephalitis—and we're talking
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about herpes type 1 encephalitis—is the most common.
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Hemorrhage may occur in herpes meningoencephalitis
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in approximately 30% of individuals.
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It may or may not show cytotoxic
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edema on the diffusion-weighted imaging.
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If you look at the patient's post-gadolinium
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enhanced scan, you may or may not see enhancement.
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If you do see enhancement, as in this case, it usually
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means a more fulminant variety or more fulminant
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case of herpes encephalitis because enhancement
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is only in about 30% of cases as well.
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In this case, you see enhancement along the
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walls of the Sylvian fissure and into this
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periinsular region, as well as the diffuse
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enhancement of the meninges bilaterally.
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The patient has already had a shunt catheter placed here.
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So this is a patient who has pretty
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fulminant herpes encephalitis.
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What are the features?
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Bilateral involvement,
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peri-insular, medial, hippocampal.
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Temporal lobe involvement, hemorrhage in 30%,
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enhancement in about 30%, cingulum involvement—
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these are all part of the limbic system.
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Remember, the cingulum is this tissue
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that is on either side of the genu of the
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corpus callosum, extending upward, and then
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the posterior cingulum coming backwards.
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So, herpes encephalitis.
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