Interactive Transcript
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So, we'll talk first about cardiovascular infarctions,
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and they tend to have this pattern
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that you can see in this case,
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where there are multiple infarctions
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in multiple vascular distributions.
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You can see lesions in the cerebellum.
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The bilateral occipital and temporal lobes,
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the corpus callosum, the deep gray nuclei,
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and in the cortex and the frontal and prital lobes.
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And you'll notice that many of these
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lesions are in a border zone distribution,
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here between the MCA and ACA,
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bilaterally,
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and here between the MCA and PCA.
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And, of course, this is a PCA infarction,
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and these are predominantly
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border zone infarctions.
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You can see border zone infarctions because
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tiny little emboli end up in the
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border zones or because a patient
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has systemic hypotension.
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Cardiac sources,
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the most common is atrial fibrillation
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and myocardial infarction,
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followed by other entities.
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Cardiovascular infarction can also be caused by
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systemic hypotension or hypercoagulable states,
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and a fair number are hemorrhagic as well.
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This is an example of cardioembolic infarctions.
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These are images of a 77-year-old
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who had mental status change,
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hyperlipidemia, a hypercoagulable state,
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and atrial fibrillation.
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And these are the diffusion images
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and the ADC images.
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And you can see multiple bilateral
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cerebellar infarctions.
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And you know that they're acute to subacute
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because they're bright on DWI and dark on ADC.
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And you can see multiple infarctions
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in the bilateral occipital lobes
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and the bilateral parietal lobes
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and the frontal lobes.
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And you can notice that many of these infarctions
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are in a border zone distribution
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between the ACA and the MCA, superiorly,
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and between the MCA and the PCA more inferiorly.
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There's also a lesion in the posterior
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left putamen, as well as the left caudate.
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And this pattern is very characteristic
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of cardioembolic infarctions.
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When you have tiny emboli,
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they end up in the border zones.
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Some of the lesions are more peripheral
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and are more in an MCA distribution
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or more in a distal PCA distribution.
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So, this is classic for cardioembolic infarctions.
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I just wanted to show you the
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FLAIR images as well.
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So here's a FLAIR image,
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and you can just see that the lesions are
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hyperintense on FLAIR images as well.
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They're kind of subacute infarctions,
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probably over 6 hours.
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Now, we also did an MRA at the time.
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And as you'd expect,
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the MRA looks pretty normal.
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You can see the bilateral MCAs
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and ACAs and ICAs look normal.
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And here's the posterior circulation,
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the vertebral arteries, basilar artery,
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bilateral PCAs look normal as well.
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And
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the raw data, again, just confirms this
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normal anterior and posterior circulations.
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So, when we got the MR,
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we only got the MRA of the head.
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So, we further got a CTA of the neck
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to make sure there wasn't a source in the neck.
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And here's the CTA of the neck,
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and you can see the arch and
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the left subclavian artery.
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And here's the left vertebral artery,
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and you can follow it all the way up,
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and that just looks normal.
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And the right vertebral artery is coming off
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the right subclavian, and can follow that
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all the way up, and that also looks normal.
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And then,
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you can follow the left common up,
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the bifurcation looks clean,
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there's no plaque,
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so that looks normal.
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And then the right side,
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right common carotid bifurcation
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looks completely normal.
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So, you have basically no significant disease
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in the neck or head,
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and
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lesions that look classic for
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cardioembolic infarction
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in a patient with atrial fibrillation.
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