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Training Collections
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Sale 25% OffPractice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
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Sale 30% OffUnlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
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Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
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Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
42 topics, 2 hr. 16 min.
Introduction to Intradural Extramedullary Lesions
4 m.Standard MRI Pulse Sequences for Evaluating Spinal Lesions
3 m.Cystic Lumbar Schwanoma
4 m.Lumbar Spine Solid Schwanoma vs. Meningioma
3 m.Cervical Spine Plexiform Neurofibroma in a Patient with NF1
6 m.Intradural Extramedullary Lesion Differential Diagosis
3 m.Nerve Sheath Tumors of the Spine
5 m.Neurofibromatosis Type 2
4 m.Neurofibromatosis Type 1
4 m.Spinal Meningiomas
5 m.Thoracic Spine Meningioma
4 m.Calcified Meningioma
3 m.Cervical Spine Meningioma
4 m.Cervical Spine Meningioma, Atypical Location
4 m.Spinal Hemangioblastomas
3 m.Multiple Hemangioblastomas, Von Hippel Lindau
4 m.Myxopapillary Ependymoma
4 m.Spinal Paraganglioma
2 m.Differential Diagosis of Intradural Metastasis
10 m.Subarachnoid Seeding from Medulloblastoma
4 m.Subarachoid Seeding in a Breast Cancer Patient
3 m.Spinal Lymphoma
2 m.Congenital and Developmental IDEM Cysts
8 m.Neurenteric Cysts
4 m.Transdural Herniation of the Spinal Cord
3 m.Spinal Arachoid Cyst
3 m.Prominent Transdural Herniation of the Spinal Cord
2 m.Fat Containing Spine Lesions
4 m.Lumbar Spine Lipoma
2 m.Pediatric Lumbar Lipoma and a Congenital Malformation
3 m.Lipoma vs. Fatty Infiltration of the Filum
3 m.Congenital Dural Ectasia
3 m.Dural Ectasia
2 m.Dural Arteriovenous Fistula Type 1
4 m.Dural AVF vs. Normal Variation
5 m.Review of Dural AVF Types II, III, and IV
3 m.IDEM Infectious and Inflammatory Abormalities
6 m.Guillian Barre Syndrome
3 m.Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy
3 m.CIDP Causing Cauda Equina Syndrome
3 m.CIDP Causing Brachial Plexopathy
3 m.Indradural Extramedullary Processes - Conclusion
2 m.0:01
Let's contrast that previous case from this child who
0:07
also has a fat containing lesion in the spinal canal.
0:11
We have T1-weighted scan, T2-weighted scan,
0:13
and STIR imaging of the lumbar spine.
0:18
So the lesion is bright in signal intensity
0:21
on the T1-weighted scan simulating fat,
0:25
ad on the STIR imaging where the fat has been suppressed,
0:28
the lesion suppresses. So, we know it's a lipoma.
0:32
even if we didn't have the STIR imaging, however,
0:36
we would have a good indication that this is fat
0:39
containing as opposed to high protein or melanin
0:44
containing or enhancement by virtue of the chemical
0:49
shift artifact that I described previously,
0:52
at the border of the lesion with this darker rim as a
0:56
frequency shift associated with the different
0:59
frequency at which fat precesses versus CSF.
1:03
So we have a lipoma.
1:05
This one is anteriorly located.
1:07
But importantly,
1:08
this patient also has a low lying spinal cord, right?
1:12
So we have the...
1:14
we're at, maybe this is five, and this is L4,
1:16
and this is L3, L2, L1.
1:18
So you have cord tethering with this lipoma.
1:23
If we go further and count the number of sacral
1:27
segments, we note that there's an S1, an S2, and S3,
1:32
and then we sort of kind of lose the development
1:35
of the lower sacrum and coccyx.
1:37
So this patient's congenital malformation is associated
1:42
with this lipoma and the tethered cord.
1:45
Let's just scroll a little bit more from side to side.
1:49
You want to look for whether or not there are posterior
1:52
elements that are intact to also identify whether
1:56
there is spinal dysraphism. In this case,
1:59
the posterior elements are intact,
2:01
but the lower sacrum and coccyx
2:03
have not been well developed.
2:04
You also want to look in the subcutaneous fat.
2:07
And this sometimes requires windowing at different
2:11
levels to see whether or not there is a tract leading
2:14
from the skin surface to this lipoma
2:17
or to the end of the spinal cord.
2:19
We note also that there is fat down here, which is
2:23
suppressing more posteriorly. So in this area
2:26
where the sacrum has not been well developed,
2:28
you also have prominence to the posterior epidural fat,
2:34
which is separate from the lipoma more anteriorly.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
Let's contrast that previous case from this child who
0:07
also has a fat containing lesion in the spinal canal.
0:11
We have T1-weighted scan, T2-weighted scan,
0:13
and STIR imaging of the lumbar spine.
0:18
So the lesion is bright in signal intensity
0:21
on the T1-weighted scan simulating fat,
0:25
ad on the STIR imaging where the fat has been suppressed,
0:28
the lesion suppresses. So, we know it's a lipoma.
0:32
even if we didn't have the STIR imaging, however,
0:36
we would have a good indication that this is fat
0:39
containing as opposed to high protein or melanin
0:44
containing or enhancement by virtue of the chemical
0:49
shift artifact that I described previously,
0:52
at the border of the lesion with this darker rim as a
0:56
frequency shift associated with the different
0:59
frequency at which fat precesses versus CSF.
1:03
So we have a lipoma.
1:05
This one is anteriorly located.
1:07
But importantly,
1:08
this patient also has a low lying spinal cord, right?
1:12
So we have the...
1:14
we're at, maybe this is five, and this is L4,
1:16
and this is L3, L2, L1.
1:18
So you have cord tethering with this lipoma.
1:23
If we go further and count the number of sacral
1:27
segments, we note that there's an S1, an S2, and S3,
1:32
and then we sort of kind of lose the development
1:35
of the lower sacrum and coccyx.
1:37
So this patient's congenital malformation is associated
1:42
with this lipoma and the tethered cord.
1:45
Let's just scroll a little bit more from side to side.
1:49
You want to look for whether or not there are posterior
1:52
elements that are intact to also identify whether
1:56
there is spinal dysraphism. In this case,
1:59
the posterior elements are intact,
2:01
but the lower sacrum and coccyx
2:03
have not been well developed.
2:04
You also want to look in the subcutaneous fat.
2:07
And this sometimes requires windowing at different
2:11
levels to see whether or not there is a tract leading
2:14
from the skin surface to this lipoma
2:17
or to the end of the spinal cord.
2:19
We note also that there is fat down here, which is
2:23
suppressing more posteriorly. So in this area
2:26
where the sacrum has not been well developed,
2:28
you also have prominence to the posterior epidural fat,
2:34
which is separate from the lipoma more anteriorly.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Spine
Pediatrics
Neuroradiology
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
MRI
Congenital
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