Interactive Transcript
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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.
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