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Training Collections
Library Memberships
Sale 25% OffOn-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Sale 25% OffPractice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Sale 30% OffUnlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Continuing Medical Education (State CME)
Complete all of your state CME requirements in one convenient place.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
Case of the Week (Free)
Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Case Crunch: Rapid Case Review (Free)
Register for free live board reviews.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
22 topics, 1 hr. 2 min.
Introduction to Neurodegenerative Diseases
3 m.Huntington’s Disease
3 m.Types of Movement Disorder
4 m.Extrapyramidal Anatomy
4 m.Neuroanatomy and Neurophysiology of the corpus striatum 1
4 m.Neuroanatomy and Neurophysiology of the corpus striatum 2
4 m.Huntington’s Chorea Case Review
5 m.Measurements and Ratios in Huntington’s Chorea
3 m.Epidemiology of Huntington's disease
5 m.Clinical Implications Part 2
4 m.Genetic Choreas
4 m.Imaging Differentiators in Genetic Choreas
3 m.Sydenham’s Chorea
4 m.Immunologic Causes of Chorea
3 m.Infectious Causes of Chorea
3 m.Drug Induced Choreas
3 m.Vascular Choreas
3 m.Neoplastic Disorder Choreas
2 m.Metabolic Causes of Chorea Part 1
2 m.Metabolic Causes of Chorea Part 2
3 m.MR Spectroscopy in Huntington's Chorea
3 m.Huntington’s Chorea on PET
3 m.9 topics, 26 min.
12 topics, 48 min.
Lipoid Proteinosis or Urbach-Wiethe Disease
3 m.Parkinson’s Disease (PD) vs Lewy Body Dementia (LBD)
5 m.Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP)
6 m.Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) vs Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD)
4 m.Multiple System Atrophy (MSA)
3 m.Midbrain Anatomy: PSP
3 m.Bilateral Corpus Striatum Caudoputamen Hyperintensity Differential Diagnosis
6 m.Dystonia
6 m.Bilateral Corpus Striatum Caudoputamen Hyperintensity: Wilson’s Disease
5 m.Wilson’s Disease: Panda Sign
3 m.MSA Subtypes: MSA-C
5 m.Parkinsonian Syndromes: MSA-P
6 m.20 topics, 1 hr. 16 min.
Cerebellopontine Atrophy Differential in Older Population
7 m.GCA Scale for Assessing Neurodegenerative Disease
3 m.Medial Temporal Lobe Scale
3 m.Fazekas Scale
3 m.Koedam Parietal Atrophy Scale
3 m.Mild Cognitive Impairment Syndrome
8 m.Differential Diagnosis of Cognitive Decline
5 m.Alzheimer's Disease: Part 1
3 m.Alzheimer's Disease: Part 2
4 m.Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease: Part 1
3 m.Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease: Part 2
5 m.Subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy
5 m.Using Fiber Tracking in Neurodegenerative Disease Cases
2 m.Vascular Dementia Differential Diagnosis: Part 1
5 m.Vascular Dementia Differential Diagnosis: Part 2
6 m.Dementia of Unknown Type
4 m.Pick's Disease
4 m.Pick’s Disease Subtypes
3 m.The Role of PET in Pick's disease
3 m.Differential Diagnosis of Parkinsonian Symptoms
5 m.0:00
Let's talk about some tips for differentiating
0:03
other genetic Chorea from Huntington's Chorea.
0:05
One of these is HDL 2,
0:08
and that one you can't differentiate radiographically
0:12
but if you see somebody of African-American ancestry,
0:15
you should be suspicious of that disease,
0:17
and note this to the pathologist or whoever's
0:21
doing the DNA sequencing.
0:23
Prion disease, we discussed in another
0:25
vignette, that in prion disease just sitting there
0:29
persistently unchanging for a protracted period of
0:32
time is relaxation prolongation that may involve
0:35
the putamen or putamina bilaterally,
0:38
but also the cortical areas.
0:40
It may be symmetric or asymmetric.
0:42
It does not enhance.
0:44
Signal alterations in true Huntington's disease
0:47
don't occur till much later on in the disorder in
0:51
the caudoputaminal distribution
0:53
and not in the cortex.
0:55
Spinocerebellar ataxia, well, these are easy.
0:58
You've got preferential disproportionate atrophy
1:01
in the cerebellum.
1:03
Not so in Huntington's Chorea.
1:06
If we look at our case right here,
1:08
there is some cerebellar atrophy, but it is not
1:11
nearly as pronounced as the cortical and sylvian atrophy
1:15
that we see in the supratentorial space.
1:18
DPL, hard to say.
1:20
Dentatorubral Pallidoluysian Atrophy is another CAG
1:27
repeat disorder, and this is so rare that I
1:29
often just lump it into the differential.
1:32
But it is not distinguishable from Huntington's chorea
1:35
very easily by imaging.
1:37
Other rare disorders like ataxia-telangiectasia,
1:41
they'll have abnormalities of the
1:43
posterior fossa and telangiectasias,
1:45
which makes the diagnosis a bit easier.
1:49
Wilson's disease, they often have abnormalities
1:52
of the thalamus bilaterally.
1:54
You may see something called the big Panda sign,
1:56
which we will be discussing a little bit later on.
1:58
And they do not have the character of atrophy in
2:02
the caudoputaminal distribution that you
2:04
see in genetic Huntington's Chorea.
2:08
And then finally, Holovorden-spatz disease,
2:11
now known as pantothenate kinase-associated neural
2:16
degeneration is associated with exaggerated
2:19
iron stores in the globus pallidus,
2:22
especially early on in the disorder and that
2:26
should help you distinguish it from Huntington's Chorea,
2:28
plus the symptoms are a bit different even though
2:31
they might have a chorea-type movement disorder.
2:35
Let's move on now to a discussion
2:37
of Sydenham's chorea.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
Let's talk about some tips for differentiating
0:03
other genetic Chorea from Huntington's Chorea.
0:05
One of these is HDL 2,
0:08
and that one you can't differentiate radiographically
0:12
but if you see somebody of African-American ancestry,
0:15
you should be suspicious of that disease,
0:17
and note this to the pathologist or whoever's
0:21
doing the DNA sequencing.
0:23
Prion disease, we discussed in another
0:25
vignette, that in prion disease just sitting there
0:29
persistently unchanging for a protracted period of
0:32
time is relaxation prolongation that may involve
0:35
the putamen or putamina bilaterally,
0:38
but also the cortical areas.
0:40
It may be symmetric or asymmetric.
0:42
It does not enhance.
0:44
Signal alterations in true Huntington's disease
0:47
don't occur till much later on in the disorder in
0:51
the caudoputaminal distribution
0:53
and not in the cortex.
0:55
Spinocerebellar ataxia, well, these are easy.
0:58
You've got preferential disproportionate atrophy
1:01
in the cerebellum.
1:03
Not so in Huntington's Chorea.
1:06
If we look at our case right here,
1:08
there is some cerebellar atrophy, but it is not
1:11
nearly as pronounced as the cortical and sylvian atrophy
1:15
that we see in the supratentorial space.
1:18
DPL, hard to say.
1:20
Dentatorubral Pallidoluysian Atrophy is another CAG
1:27
repeat disorder, and this is so rare that I
1:29
often just lump it into the differential.
1:32
But it is not distinguishable from Huntington's chorea
1:35
very easily by imaging.
1:37
Other rare disorders like ataxia-telangiectasia,
1:41
they'll have abnormalities of the
1:43
posterior fossa and telangiectasias,
1:45
which makes the diagnosis a bit easier.
1:49
Wilson's disease, they often have abnormalities
1:52
of the thalamus bilaterally.
1:54
You may see something called the big Panda sign,
1:56
which we will be discussing a little bit later on.
1:58
And they do not have the character of atrophy in
2:02
the caudoputaminal distribution that you
2:04
see in genetic Huntington's Chorea.
2:08
And then finally, Holovorden-spatz disease,
2:11
now known as pantothenate kinase-associated neural
2:16
degeneration is associated with exaggerated
2:19
iron stores in the globus pallidus,
2:22
especially early on in the disorder and that
2:26
should help you distinguish it from Huntington's Chorea,
2:28
plus the symptoms are a bit different even though
2:31
they might have a chorea-type movement disorder.
2:35
Let's move on now to a discussion
2:37
of Sydenham's chorea.
Report
Description
Faculty
Stephen J Pomeranz, MD
Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online
ProScan Imaging
Tags
Syndromes
Non-infectious Inflammatory
Neuroradiology
Metabolic
MRI
Idiopathic
Congenital
Brain
Acquired/Developmental
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