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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.
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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.
60 topics, 3 hr. 18 min.
Introduction to the Carotid Space
3 m.Suprahyoid Spaces of the Head and Neck
4 m.Carotid Space Imaging Protocols
3 m.Contents of the Carotid Space
3 m.Carotid Space – Vitamin C&D
2 m.Vasculopathies and Variants
6 m.Carotid Fibromuscular Dysplasia with Dissection
8 m.Takayasu’s arteritis
3 m.Loeys-Dietz Syndrome
2 m.Marfan’s Syndrome
2 m.Carotid Space Infections
5 m.Causes of Internal Jugular Vein Thrombosis
5 m.Lemierre’s Syndrome
4 m.Internal Jugular Vein Thrombosis
3 m.Ludwig’s Angina (Carotid)
3 m.Internal Carotid Arteritis Secondary to Sialadenitis
3 m.Trauma in the Carotid Space
2 m.Penetrating Gunshot Wound of the Carotid Artery
4 m.Idiopathic Internal Carotid Artery Dissection
4 m.Internal Carotid Artery Dissection and Pseudoaneurysm
4 m.Horner Syndrome with Carotid Dissection
6 m.Carotid Blowout
3 m.Dissection and Strokes
6 m.Cervical Carotid Artery Dissection
4 m.Horner Syndrome
5 m.Value of Neurovascular Imaging for Seat Belt Injury
6 m.Right Internal Carotid Artery Pseudoaneurysm
3 m.Carotidynia – summary
4 m.Carotidynia
3 m.Carotid Space Neoplasms
2 m.Carotid Body Tumor
4 m.Carotid Body Tumor - Right Side
3 m.Bilateral Carotid Body Tumors
4 m.Carotid Body Tumor - Summary
5 m.Carotid Body Tumor Preoperative Imaging
3 m.Glomus Jugulare – summary
3 m.Glomus Jugulare with Tinnitis
4 m.Glomus Jugulare
3 m.Glomus Jugulare Tumor
2 m.Glomus Vagale – summary
3 m.Glomus Vagale
6 m.Hereditary Paragangliomas
3 m.Glomus Vagale, Carotid Body Tumor, Multiple Paragangliomas
4 m.Carotid Space Schwannomas
7 m.Vagal Schwannoma
4 m.Vagal Schwannoma, Growing in to Jugular Foramen
4 m.Carotid Space Neoplasms and Mass Effect
4 m.Sympathetic Trunk Neurofibroma in Neurofibromatosis
4 m.Carotid Space Meningioma
3 m.Carotid Invasion and Malignancy
3 m.Glottic Squamous Cell Carcinoma Invading the Carotid Space
4 m.Carotid Encasement from Metastatic Neuroblastoma
3 m.Characterizing Carotid Encasement
5 m.Lymph nodes by level of involvement
4 m.Tumors Impacting the Internal Jugular Vein
3 m.Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Metastasis Mimicking Glomus
4 m.Pathology in the Carotid Space – Summary
6 m.The Cervical Sympathetic Chain
1 m.Vagus Nerve Anatomy
2 m.Deep Cervical Fascia of the Carotid Sheath
3 m.0:01
Let's move from the carotid body tumor to the
0:04
second most common of the paragangliomas of the
0:06
head and neck, and that is the glomus jugulare.
0:10
This represents between 20 and 30%
0:12
of head neck paragangliomas,
0:15
leaving the glomus vagale to about five to 10% of cases.
0:20
Once again, I want to point out some of the literature that
0:23
has come out of the Johns Hopkins Hospital
0:25
with regard to the paragangliomas
0:28
of the skull base.
0:30
This was a study in which we looked at the
0:32
incidence at which the jugular vein was invaded
0:37
by the tumors of the head and neck.
0:41
And we were specifically looking at glomus
0:43
jugulare versus carotid body tumors
0:46
versus glomus vagale tumors.
0:48
And what you can see is that it is pretty much
0:50
a rule that those tumors that grow from the
0:55
jugular foramen, the glomus jugulare tumors,
0:58
will invade the jugular vein,
1:00
and that is very reliable in distinguishing
1:03
schwannomas from paragangliomas of
1:06
the jugular foramen. However,
1:08
it is also true that glomus vagale
1:10
tumors and some carotid tumors,
1:13
though at a smaller percentage,
1:15
also may occasionally invade the jugular vein.
1:18
So it doesn't help necessarily in defining which
1:21
type of paraganglioma will invade the jugular
1:24
vein, but it does help in distinguishing it, for example,
1:28
from schwannomas or lymph node metastases or
1:32
other tumors that arise in this location.
1:35
As with the carotid body tumors,
1:38
there are multiple different classifications
1:41
of glomus jugularis.
1:44
I should mention that the fourth type of
1:46
paraganglioma that occurs in the head
1:50
neck is the glomus tympanicum.
1:53
These occur in the middle ear cavity,
1:55
and therefore they are more discussed in a
1:58
temporal bone lecture than in
2:00
a head and neck lecture.
2:02
And certainly they are not considered
2:04
carotid space tumors.
2:06
So if we look at the classification
2:08
of the glomus jugulare,
2:11
you see that we have small tumors
2:13
involving the jugular bulb,
2:14
middle ear and mastoid tumors that extend under
2:17
the internal auditory canal that may
2:19
have intracranial extension.
2:21
Then we have tumors that extend into the petrous
2:24
apex and then those that extend beyond the
2:26
Petrous apex into the clivus or
2:29
into the foramen magnum,
2:31
which is that area that we're looking at at
2:33
the skull base and in the neck region.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
Let's move from the carotid body tumor to the
0:04
second most common of the paragangliomas of the
0:06
head and neck, and that is the glomus jugulare.
0:10
This represents between 20 and 30%
0:12
of head neck paragangliomas,
0:15
leaving the glomus vagale to about five to 10% of cases.
0:20
Once again, I want to point out some of the literature that
0:23
has come out of the Johns Hopkins Hospital
0:25
with regard to the paragangliomas
0:28
of the skull base.
0:30
This was a study in which we looked at the
0:32
incidence at which the jugular vein was invaded
0:37
by the tumors of the head and neck.
0:41
And we were specifically looking at glomus
0:43
jugulare versus carotid body tumors
0:46
versus glomus vagale tumors.
0:48
And what you can see is that it is pretty much
0:50
a rule that those tumors that grow from the
0:55
jugular foramen, the glomus jugulare tumors,
0:58
will invade the jugular vein,
1:00
and that is very reliable in distinguishing
1:03
schwannomas from paragangliomas of
1:06
the jugular foramen. However,
1:08
it is also true that glomus vagale
1:10
tumors and some carotid tumors,
1:13
though at a smaller percentage,
1:15
also may occasionally invade the jugular vein.
1:18
So it doesn't help necessarily in defining which
1:21
type of paraganglioma will invade the jugular
1:24
vein, but it does help in distinguishing it, for example,
1:28
from schwannomas or lymph node metastases or
1:32
other tumors that arise in this location.
1:35
As with the carotid body tumors,
1:38
there are multiple different classifications
1:41
of glomus jugularis.
1:44
I should mention that the fourth type of
1:46
paraganglioma that occurs in the head
1:50
neck is the glomus tympanicum.
1:53
These occur in the middle ear cavity,
1:55
and therefore they are more discussed in a
1:58
temporal bone lecture than in
2:00
a head and neck lecture.
2:02
And certainly they are not considered
2:04
carotid space tumors.
2:06
So if we look at the classification
2:08
of the glomus jugulare,
2:11
you see that we have small tumors
2:13
involving the jugular bulb,
2:14
middle ear and mastoid tumors that extend under
2:17
the internal auditory canal that may
2:19
have intracranial extension.
2:21
Then we have tumors that extend into the petrous
2:24
apex and then those that extend beyond the
2:26
Petrous apex into the clivus or
2:29
into the foramen magnum,
2:31
which is that area that we're looking at at
2:33
the skull base and in the neck region.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Neuroradiology
Neuro
Neoplastic
MRI
Head and Neck
CT
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