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Wk 4, Case 5 - Review

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This is the case of a 65-year-old with a PSA rising to 5.

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We have our axial T2, our ADC maps, which are

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windowed at a window level of 1400x1400, our

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high B-value image, and a post-contrast image.

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I believe this is a delayed,

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it's not an arterial phase image.

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So, what's nice about this case is,

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it's a very good example.

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Of how when you render your ADC map correctly,

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focal tours in the peripheral zone can look just

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like little black holes on a background of white.

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So there are four errors in the

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peripheral zone in this case.

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One here, one here, one here, and here.

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We have well-defined black holes on the ADC

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map on a background of normal, high signal.

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Each one of these has diffusion characteristics of

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a PI-RADS 4 lesion in that they're dark on the ADC

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map, and I like to use a cutoff of ADC of 1000, and

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they're bright on the interpolated high B-value images.

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So, dark, bright.

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Dark, bright, dark, bright, and I'm gonna

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go lower, this guy here, dark, bright.

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They all also have correlates on the T2 images,

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so here's a nice little well-defined low T2 signal

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nodule you can almost pluck out of the gland.

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And then here's another one, and then

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here's another one, here's another one.

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On prior cases, we talked about the ejaculatory ducts

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being located in the midline, having a triangular shape.

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But the ejaculatory ducts are located in the base

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and mid-gland, and they disappear by the apex.

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This is the apical part of the gland.

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This is too far inferior to be an ejaculatory duct.

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Those ducts would be located somewhere up here.

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Now, given that these are already PI-RADS 4 lesions, it

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doesn't matter what they do on the post-contrast images.

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So we don't need to worry about that,

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we don't have an arterial phase.

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Each one of these areas was targeted and resulted

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in a Gleason 3 plus 4 or higher histology.

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Uh, so the PI-RADS nomenclature worked nicely in this case.

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In the transition zone, which is mildly

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enlarged, you have the normal heterogeneous

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appearance of prostatic hypertrophy.

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Here we have some thickened anterior stroma.

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It's, uh, crescentric, it parallels the margin,

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it's on both sides, uh, it does not enhance.

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I find the lack of enhancement is the

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best tip for identifying anterior stroma.

Report

Case Discussion

Faculty

Daniel Cornfeld, MD

Chief Radiologist

Mātai

Stephen Currin, MD

Radiologist

IMED

Evan Allgood, MD

Abdominal Radiologist

Beverly Radiology Medical Group

Tags

Prostate/seminal vesicles

MRI

Genitourinary (GU)

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