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34 topics, 1 hr. 48 min.
Extradural Spine Lesions
7 m.Degenerative Spondylomyelopathy
3 m.Traumatic Lesions of the Spine
6 m.Subdural Hematoma of the Spine
2 m.Epidural Hematoma of the Spine
2 m.Post-operative Hematoma
4 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis of the Spine
5 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis with Epidural Phlegmon/Abscess
4 m.Tuberculous Spondylitis
5 m.Discitis-Osteomyelitis with Prevertebral Abscess
2 m.Discitis Osteomyelitis with Anterior Epidural Phlegmon
3 m.Epidural Abscess from Facet Joint Infectious Synovitis
4 m.Paraspinal Abscess with Epidural Extension
3 m.Summary of Extradural Neoplasms
4 m.Lumbar Spine Schwannoma Extending into the Neural Foramen
2 m.Primary Osseous Extradural Neoplasms
8 m.Osteochondroma of the Spine
3 m.Extradural Metastatic Disease
4 m.Chondrosarcoma of the Spine
4 m.Metastatic Disease vs. Multiple Myeloma
3 m.Malignant versus Benign Compression Fractures
7 m.Extramedullary Hematopoiesis of the Epidural Space
3 m.Paraspinal Extramedullary Hematopoiesis
2 m.Multifocal Epidural Extramedullary Hematopoiesis
4 m.Epidural Lipomatosis
3 m.Extradural Congenital Lesions
6 m.Epidermoid Cyst of the Thoracic Spine
3 m.Spinal Congenital Anomalies: Myelomeningoceles
6 m.Cervicothoracic Myelomeningocele
3 m.Recurrent Myelomeningocele and Cord Tethering After Repair
2 m.Diastematomyelia
3 m.Diastematomyelia
3 m.Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy
3 m.Extradural Processes – Conclusion
3 m.0:01
This is a child that had spastic gait and
0:04
was known to have spinal dysraphism.
0:07
As we look at the T1-weighted scan, we would calculate
0:09
that the cord ends at approximately the L4 level,
0:14
therefore is low in location.
0:16
We also see that the patient has a syrinx in
0:19
the spinal cord at the L1-T12 level.
0:23
And this is well demonstrated on the T2-weighted sequences.
0:27
However,
0:27
at the level of the spinal dysraphism you see
0:30
that the spinous processes are missing
0:32
here. We see this little bony bar which is extending
0:36
to a fused L4 and L5 vertebral body segment.
0:41
So this patient has a segmentation anomaly.
0:44
A low spinal cord or tethered cord, has a syrinx.
0:47
And then when we look at the axial scan, we see that there is
0:51
a separation of two thecal sacs with this bony bar
0:56
at the L4-L5 level, and then it reconnects
1:00
to a low-lying conus, down at the L5-S1 level.
1:05
So this is L5-S1.
1:07
We scroll superiorly.
1:09
We have the two portions of the cord separating by this
1:13
diastematomyelia. And then as we go higher, they will fuse back,
1:19
you see, into a single spinal cord with a syrinx.
1:23
So this is an excellent
1:25
example of all the potential associations of
1:28
diastematomyelia. That is, it may have a syrinx,
1:32
it may have a spinal dysraphism,
1:34
it may have a tethered cord.
1:36
And in this case,
1:37
it's a separation by bone with the
1:40
two hemicords coming together.
1:43
Remember that each of these hemicords has just
1:47
one side's nerve roots. So here's the left side.
1:50
You don't see any nerve roots coming
1:51
off of the right side of this hemicord.
1:53
And you don't see any nerve roots coming
1:55
off of the left side of this right hemicord.
1:57
And then they combine together more inferiorly
2:00
into the tethered cord. A wonderful case.
2:04
And that's why I love diastematomyelia,
2:06
in addition to the fact that it's
2:08
approximately nine syllables.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
This is a child that had spastic gait and
0:04
was known to have spinal dysraphism.
0:07
As we look at the T1-weighted scan, we would calculate
0:09
that the cord ends at approximately the L4 level,
0:14
therefore is low in location.
0:16
We also see that the patient has a syrinx in
0:19
the spinal cord at the L1-T12 level.
0:23
And this is well demonstrated on the T2-weighted sequences.
0:27
However,
0:27
at the level of the spinal dysraphism you see
0:30
that the spinous processes are missing
0:32
here. We see this little bony bar which is extending
0:36
to a fused L4 and L5 vertebral body segment.
0:41
So this patient has a segmentation anomaly.
0:44
A low spinal cord or tethered cord, has a syrinx.
0:47
And then when we look at the axial scan, we see that there is
0:51
a separation of two thecal sacs with this bony bar
0:56
at the L4-L5 level, and then it reconnects
1:00
to a low-lying conus, down at the L5-S1 level.
1:05
So this is L5-S1.
1:07
We scroll superiorly.
1:09
We have the two portions of the cord separating by this
1:13
diastematomyelia. And then as we go higher, they will fuse back,
1:19
you see, into a single spinal cord with a syrinx.
1:23
So this is an excellent
1:25
example of all the potential associations of
1:28
diastematomyelia. That is, it may have a syrinx,
1:32
it may have a spinal dysraphism,
1:34
it may have a tethered cord.
1:36
And in this case,
1:37
it's a separation by bone with the
1:40
two hemicords coming together.
1:43
Remember that each of these hemicords has just
1:47
one side's nerve roots. So here's the left side.
1:50
You don't see any nerve roots coming
1:51
off of the right side of this hemicord.
1:53
And you don't see any nerve roots coming
1:55
off of the left side of this right hemicord.
1:57
And then they combine together more inferiorly
2:00
into the tethered cord. A wonderful case.
2:04
And that's why I love diastematomyelia,
2:06
in addition to the fact that it's
2:08
approximately nine syllables.
Report
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Spine
Neuroradiology
Neuro
MSK
MRI
CT
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