Lea Alhilali, MD Profile picture
Jan 19 24 tweets 9 min read Read on X
1/Do questions about brainstem anatomy cause you to suddenly get a case of locked in syndrome?!

Feeling brain dead when trying to localize in the brain stem?

Do you try to localize the lesion or just wait for the MR?

Here’s a thread to help w/brainstem anatomy & localization! Image
2/First some gross anatomy.

Brainstem from the side looks like a dad-bod--the body you get after kids wear you down & you don’t exercise anymore.

Head & shoulders are the midbrain, potbelly is the pons, & fat thighs are the medulla Image
3/Midbrain is the head & shoulders.

This makes sense b/c the name “midbrain”—brains should be in the head.

Midbrain also has the cerebral peduncles which look like classic Mickey Mouse ears—and dads classically have big, usually hairy, ears Image
4/Back of the midbrain has 2 bumps—superior & inferior colliculi (parts of vision & auditory pathways, respectively)

You can see these bumps on the dad bod too

Back of the balding head is the superior colliculus & the buffalo hump from his obesity is the inferior colliculus Image
5/Next is the pons.

Dad potbelly is the basis pontis.

Dad’s butt is the facial colliculus—where the facial nerve bulges out as it goes around, behind the 6th nerve nucleus.

Facial colliculus looks like two little baby butt cheeks on the axial images as well! Image
6/Finally, is the medulla, which are the dad’s thunder thighs before heading down into the thinner legs of the spinal cord. Image
7/You can see this dad bod looking at the brainstem from the front too.

You have the head of the midbrain, which then bulges as you go down into the pons/potbelly

It then narrows as it goes down into the medulla/hips Image
8/The hallmark of a brainstem lesion/syndrome is an ipsilateral cranial nerve deficit & contralateral body deficit (be it weakness, sensory loss, or ataxia) Image
9/You can remember this split b/c it common that your head wants to do one thing (work out) but your body feels like doing another (relaxing).

So it is not uncommon that things in the head & neck (cranial nerves) will be the opposite of the body Image
10/This is true not only for motor (ie, exercising), but also for sensory.

Often your head has certain feelings that do not match up with the feelings in your heart/body.

This split between head and body is key for recognizing brainstem syndromes Image
11/Brainstem is basically a highway between the brain & spinal cord.

Motor information is traveling south on the highway to the cord & sensory information is traveling north from the cord to the brain Image
12/Like any highway, there are on ramps & off ramps.

Motor information exits at the off ramps & sensory information comes in through the on ramps.

These on ramps & exits in the brainstem are the cranial nerves Image
13/On a highway, we know where we are by what exit we are near—they act like mile markers.

We localize how far we are on the highway by the exit we are at.

Same w/the brainstem. We know where we are in the brainstem by which exit or cranial nerve we are near Image
14/We know where the brainstem exits are using the rule of 4s:

There are 4 CNs in each section (medulla, pons, & above the pons).

Counting up from 12, we can see that 9-12 are in the medulla, 5-8 in the pons, and 3 & 4 in the midbrain (1&2 are supratentorial) Image
15/Determining which CN is involved by a lesion & using the rule of 4s can tell us where we are in the brainstem top to bottom.

But how do we localize in the transverse plane (medial or lateral)? Image
16/We can do this by determining whether it involves the motor tracts or the two major sensory tracts: the medial lemniscus, well medially, and the spinothalamic tract laterally. Image
17/Motor is anterior.

Motor involvement tells you if the lesion is anterior or posterior.

Medial lemniscus is medial, so its involvement suggests medial location, while spinothalamic injury suggests lateral location.

Together w/CN involvement, you can now localize in 3 planes Image
18/You can remember motor is anterior b/c that’s where motors are usually in a car.

So motor involvement equals an anterior lesion, while sparing of it suggests a more posterior location Image
19/How to remember which sensory deficits are medial & which are lateral?

Well, medial lemniscus is vibration information & proprioception. I abbreviate it VIP—& all VIPs are the center of attention (center = medial), so vibration & proprioception loss indicates medial location Image
20/Spinothalamic is pain & temperature.

You can remember that w/temperature, the first thing that burns is the skin or periphery—so temperature is peripheral or lateral.

Same w/pain—it is always your extremities or periphery that get hurt, so pain is peripheral/lateral Image
21/CN involvement also indicates medial or lateral position.

CNs located in the midline innervate midline structures.

CNs located laterally in the brainstem innervate lateral structures.

So yourself ask—does the CN involved innervate medial or lateral structures? Image
22/Medial structures are eyes & tongue.

All other CNs innervate a lateral object (lat face, ear, parotid, carotid, abdom viscera, shoulder musc)

If CN innervates eyes/tongue, it’s medial in the brainstem—& is also divisible into 12.

Opposite is true for lateral located CNs Image
23/So for every brainstem lesion, do 3 things:

1. Find where it is along the length of the brainstem using CN involvement

2. Determine if it’s ant or post based on whether motor is involved

3. Determine if it’s med or lat based on type of sensory deficit & CN involvement Image
24/Now you can localize brainstem lesions in all 3 planes based on their clinical presentation!

Hopefully now when confronted w/a brainstem syndrome, you will no longer be locked in, but instead handle it like a VIP! Image

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More from @teachplaygrub

Jan 16
1/Are you in a FOG about MOG?

MOG antibody associated disease or MOGAD is a relatively new demyelinating disease

Do you wish you knew mo’ about MOGAD? Do you know what to look for?

This week’s SCANtastic from @theAJNR will show all you need to know!

ajnr.org/content/45/1/66
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2/The story of MOGAD begins w/neuromyelitis optica or NMO.

Clinicians were findings patients they THOUGHT had NMO, but they did not have the NMO aquaporin-4 antibody

It’s like finding a dollar that looks real, but on closer look, doesn’t have the authenticity markers it needs Image
3/Originally, they still classified these pts as NMO.

But soon they found many of these aquaporin-4 antibody negative pts had an antibody to another protein: myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein or MOG

MOG is found on the outer surface of the myelin sheath Image
Read 21 tweets
Jan 12
1/To call it or not to call it? That is the question!

Do you feel a bit wacky & wobbly when it comes to calling normal pressure hydrocephalus on imaging?

You don’t want to overcall it, but you don’t want to miss it either!

Let me help you out w/a thread about imaging in NPH! Image
2/First, you must understand the pathophysiology of “idiopathic” or iNPH.

It was first described in 1965—but, of the original six in the 1965 cohort, 4 were found to have underlying causes for hydrocephalus.

This begs the question—when do you stop looking & call it idiopathic? Image
3/Thus, some don’t believe true idiopathic NPH exists.

After all, it’s a syndrome defined essentially only by response to a treatment w/o ever a placebo-controlled trial

However, most believe iNPH does exist--but its underlying etiology is controversial

Several theories exist Image
Read 19 tweets
Jan 8
1/Your baby’s all grown up!

Cerebellum may mean “little cerebrum” but its jobs are anything but little

How well do YOU know cerebellar anatomy?

Do you just say “cerebellar hemisphere” & hope nobody asks?

Here’s a thread to teach you the key cerebellar functional anatomy! Image
2/Cerebellum means “little cerebrum” or “little brain” bc it looks like a mini brain

However, it does not play a mini role.

Despite being much smaller than the cerebrum, it has many more neurons—it has 80% of your neurons! Image
3/When most people think of cerebellar function, they think of balance.

The first thing that comes to mind with cerebellar dysfunction is imbalance & dizziness.

However, the cerebellum is involved in much more, including cognitive functions! Image
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Jan 3
1/Veins are like defense, arteries like offense.

Arteries get all the glory & attention, but you're nothing w/o veins!

You should look for venous infarcts on every study--not just venograms!

Do YOU know the venous territories to check?

Here’s an easy way to remember them! Image
2/Arterial infarcts get more attention bc they are far more common & have a higher mortality.

But venous infarcts affect a younger population & can have a devastating effect.

Mortality increases w/delay in treatment.

So it’s incredibly important to recognize them early! Image
3/Unfortunately, bc venous infarcts aren’t common, we sometimes forget to look for them

Moreover, while arterial anatomy is well known, venous anatomy is often overlooked

Without realizing that an infarct affects a venous territory, a venous infarct could be easily missed Image
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Dec 21, 2023
1/Keep forgetting what to look for on scans for Alzheimer’s disease?

Do you just gestalt the volume loss & hope no one questions?

Or hope automated software provides an answer?

This week’s SCANtastic 🧵from @theAJNR will show you a better way!

ajnr.org/content/44/12/…
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2/Specific patterns of atrophy are associated w/Alzheimer’s disease (AD).

Atrophy often involves the hippocampus & the anterior/medial portion of the adjacent parahippocampal gyrus, called the entorhinal cortex

This is where to should look for volume loss on imaging, but how? Image
3/Many people do just gestalt the atrophy. But this isn't reproducible.

Others rely on automated software to give quantitative volumes down to the 100th of a mL & compare them w/an age-matched database.

Many feel this is superior—because who WOULDN’T want more data? Image
Read 19 tweets
Dec 1, 2023
1/There’s nothing more CENTRAL to reading an MRI than finding the CENTRAL sulcus!

How do YOU find it?

Luckily it’s as easy as ABC, or rather L, M, U, T!

Here’s a thread on how to find these letters on a brain MRI, so you’ll never have trouble finding the central sulcus again! Image
2/At the very top of the brain, the superior frontal gyrus (SFG) & the precentral gyrus combine to make an L.

It looks like the L loser sign you make with your hands.

This L points to the precentral gyrus—so don’t be a loser, look for this L! Image
3/If you follow this L inferiorly, it goes into the hand motor region.

This region looks like an upside-down Omega.

You can remember this b/c you make the L loser sign w/your HANDS & HANDS/ARMS wear OMEGA watches Image
Read 17 tweets

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