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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
I have to admit that dealing with hemorrhage in the
0:05
spinal canal is one of the more difficult
0:07
tasks that I feel I have to do,
0:11
because the thecal sac displacement is not as clear as it
0:16
is when you have a purely intradural
0:20
extramedullary lesion, for example.
0:22
So here we have scans with proton density-weighted,
0:27
T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and STIR imaging.
0:31
So on this T1-weighted scan,
0:33
we see that there is high signal intensity
0:35
in the lower thecal sac,
0:37
which on the T2-weighted scan also
0:40
shows high signal intensity.
0:42
And on the STIR image, has a little bit of a
0:45
heterogeneous signal intensity.
0:47
Frankly, from these three images,
0:50
I'm not really sure whether this is intrathecal or
0:53
extrathecal, that is intradural or extradural.
0:57
So we would have to rely on the T2-weighted scans.
1:00
Let's magnify the T2-weighted scans and
1:02
see whether we do any better with that.
1:04
So we're scanning from the conus medullaris downward,
1:07
and that all looks pretty good.
1:09
And then we start to hit some of this bright signal
1:12
intensity here. And continuing down into the L4-L5 level,
1:19
we see this collection here of abnormal signal intensity
1:24
within the thecal sac, corresponding to what
1:25
we're seeing on the STIR image.
1:27
To me, this looks like it is intradural.
1:32
So I would characterize this as a subdural hematoma
1:37
within the thecal sac. The leaves of
1:40
the thecal sac on the left side.
1:42
Down here, it's much more difficult to tell where
1:44
the blood products are. Most likely,
1:47
this is also in a subdural location.
1:49
Subdural hematomas of this thecal sac are considered
1:53
portions of the extradural component of the spine.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
I have to admit that dealing with hemorrhage in the
0:05
spinal canal is one of the more difficult
0:07
tasks that I feel I have to do,
0:11
because the thecal sac displacement is not as clear as it
0:16
is when you have a purely intradural
0:20
extramedullary lesion, for example.
0:22
So here we have scans with proton density-weighted,
0:27
T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and STIR imaging.
0:31
So on this T1-weighted scan,
0:33
we see that there is high signal intensity
0:35
in the lower thecal sac,
0:37
which on the T2-weighted scan also
0:40
shows high signal intensity.
0:42
And on the STIR image, has a little bit of a
0:45
heterogeneous signal intensity.
0:47
Frankly, from these three images,
0:50
I'm not really sure whether this is intrathecal or
0:53
extrathecal, that is intradural or extradural.
0:57
So we would have to rely on the T2-weighted scans.
1:00
Let's magnify the T2-weighted scans and
1:02
see whether we do any better with that.
1:04
So we're scanning from the conus medullaris downward,
1:07
and that all looks pretty good.
1:09
And then we start to hit some of this bright signal
1:12
intensity here. And continuing down into the L4-L5 level,
1:19
we see this collection here of abnormal signal intensity
1:24
within the thecal sac, corresponding to what
1:25
we're seeing on the STIR image.
1:27
To me, this looks like it is intradural.
1:32
So I would characterize this as a subdural hematoma
1:37
within the thecal sac. The leaves of
1:40
the thecal sac on the left side.
1:42
Down here, it's much more difficult to tell where
1:44
the blood products are. Most likely,
1:47
this is also in a subdural location.
1:49
Subdural hematomas of this thecal sac are considered
1:53
portions of the extradural component of the spine.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Trauma
Spine
Neuroradiology
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
MRI
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