Interactive Transcript
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Our first case is a 61-year-old male
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who had acute left-sided weakness.
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So I'm going to look at the non-contrast
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CT, and the first thing I'm going to
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look for is intracranial hemorrhage, or
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contraindication to thrombolysis, and I don't
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see any, uh, obvious intracranial hemorrhage.
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Now, the next thing I'm going to
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do is look for a dense vessel sign.
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And usually, I look on the thin
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section, one-millimeter-thick slices.
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Those initial images were
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five-millimeter-thick slices.
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I'm going to start at the bottom and I know
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I'm pretty much looking for an MCA stroke.
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So I'm going to look carefully at
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the MCA and you can see in the M1
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segment, there's hyperdensity, and
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so that's consistent with the clot.
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It's nice if you see it,
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but you have to be careful.
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Sometimes the hyperdensity can be
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from beam hardening or a motion effect.
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And sometimes you don't see
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hyperdensity, but we see it here.
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And then I'm going to look to
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see how big the core is or tissue
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that's already dead on arrival is.
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And I'm going to narrow up the windows a little
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bit, because you can see strokes a little bit
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better with narrow windows and non-contrast CT.
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You can see some loss of gray-white
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differentiation in the anterior temporal
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lobe, the insula, the subinsular
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region, maybe some subtle differences
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in the basal ganglia, hard to tell.
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You certainly see differences in
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the more superior frontal lobe
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and the perirolandic region.
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So we have, um, calculation of the ASPECTS
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score here, and this confirms what we were
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thinking that there's involvement of the
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internal capsule, the lenticulostriate nucleus.
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It's the insula and parts of the
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intertemporal lobe and inferior frontal lobe.
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And then this more superior frontal lobe
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and the perirulandic region, specifically
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the motor strip and adjacent frontal lobe.
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And that means there's an aspects score of four.
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10 and we have an ASPECTS score of four.
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So that's kind of borderline whether
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you're going to treat or not.
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It just depends on the patient's
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comorbidities and other factors.
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Okay.
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So we're gonna get more into the CTAs
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later, not too much for seeing on the next
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CTA, but I want to show you the head CTA.
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So this is the axial maximum
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intensity projection image.
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And you can see the cutoff right
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at the proximal MCA, right?
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Where we saw the hyperdense
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basal sign on the left.
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You see the nice.
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MCA branches on the right, you hardly
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see any vessels at all, so this
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patient has very poor collaterals.
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If you have poor collaterals, your strokes
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grow quickly, and usually you have a pretty big
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infarct on arrival, so that goes with the pretty
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big infarct and low ASPECTS score that we saw.
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So the MR, obtained a little bit later, this
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is the DWI image, and this confirms what
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we saw in the non-contrast CT, involvement
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of the anterior temporal lobe and the
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insula, and more anterior frontal
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lobe, and then the perirolandic region.
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So pretty big stroke on arrival, non-contrast
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CT, subtle, but showed the tissue that was dead.
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MRI, the gold standard, confirmed it.
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