Interactive Transcript
0:00
I'd like to show you this case of FMD.
0:02
These are images of a 67-year-old
0:06
female who had coronary artery
0:08
dissection and was being screened for
0:12
FMD in both her brain and her kidneys.
0:15
I'm gonna show you the brain.
0:16
So first she didn't have neurologic symptoms.
0:19
We quickly screened the brain
0:20
on the non-contrast CT and don't
0:23
see anything acute going on.
0:26
So let's take a look at the vessels.
0:29
So these are coronal reformats and we're
0:33
going to start in the carotid vessel.
0:35
So you can see the left common,
0:38
um, and then internal curving up.
0:41
And what I see is this spring of beads
0:43
appearance kind of looks like corduroy to me.
0:46
You can see that in the left
0:48
internal carotid artery.
0:49
So that looks like it might be FMD.
0:51
It does have a little atherosclerotic disease, but
0:53
this just does not look like atherosclerotic disease.
0:55
So we're pretty sure that it's FMD.
0:58
So it has a classic appearance.
0:59
Let's look at the right carotid.
1:01
So here's the right common and we can go
1:03
into the internal or that's the external.
1:06
Sorry.
1:06
Here's the internal.
1:07
And you can see there's also
1:10
some dolichoectasia and a beaded
1:12
appearance on the right side as well.
1:14
So that's also FMD.
1:18
And then, um, the vertebral arteries,
1:20
we can look at those and left vertebral
1:23
artery, maybe a little irregularity, same
1:28
thing with the right vertebral artery.
1:30
This definitely looks like a case of FMD.
1:33
Let's take a look at the axial images.
1:37
So here we go with the axial images
1:40
and I'm just going to follow the
1:41
left common carotid artery up.
1:44
We see a little atherosclerotic disease
1:45
with plaque at the bifurcation.
1:47
There's not significant stenosis.
1:49
Maybe mild stenosis.
1:52
And then, as we go up, what you see is the
1:55
vessel gets big, the vessel gets smaller.
1:58
It looks like it's an accordion, kind of.
2:01
And then the vessel gets
2:02
smaller and it's very tortuous.
2:05
So that's, that's, Pretty classic for FMD,
2:08
and then the right side, we're looking at
2:11
the right common, and right bifurcation,
2:18
maybe a little soft plaque there, you can
2:20
see, and then as you come up, it looks again,
2:24
that string of beads appearance, tortuous,
2:28
stilichoepatic, so that looks like FMD, and
2:33
then we can look at the vertebral arteries as
2:35
well, the right vertebral artery, Um, we'll
2:38
follow that up, looks pretty normal, and
2:44
then again, it's a little tortuous, slightly
2:47
irregular, so that probably is also FMD, and
2:51
then last, let's look at the left vertebral
2:53
artery, uh, little atheromatous disease at
2:57
the origin, and following it up, and it gets
3:05
small, gets a little bit bigger right there.
3:08
So again, definitely involvement of both carotid
3:12
arteries in the right vertebral artery, probably
3:14
involvement of the left vertebral artery.
3:16
And this is, um, classic FMD and she
3:19
kind of had a classic presentation
3:21
of coronary artery dissection.
3:23
I also wanted to show you the
3:25
intracranial vessels and we can see
3:28
that on these axial MIPS that the MCAs.
3:33
Look normal, the anterior cerebral
3:35
arteries look normal, the posterior
3:37
cerebral arteries look normal.
3:38
And then we'll just look at the posterior
3:40
circulation on the coronal images, and
3:43
you can see that the retubal basilar
3:45
junction looks normal, the basilar,
3:49
both PCAs look normal, and again, the
3:51
MCA bifurcations and ACAs look normal.
3:55
So that's what you'd expect with FMD.
3:56
It tends to involve the carotid and retubal
3:59
arteries and not the intracranial arteries.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.