Interactive Transcript
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We are looking at our 47-year-old patient
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who had a recent diagnosis of right breast
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cancer, and it's, um, rapidly enlarging.
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It's, um, terrible looking, um, and, um,
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I'm going to switch over and just do the,
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I'm going to do the, um, dynamic sequences.
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So we'll start in this case.
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We're just going to start at the top.
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Um, in this case, we're going to talk
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about, uh, we're going to, we're going to
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emphasize local, regional, and venopathy.
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I know I've already said that already,
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but, um, and then this is an example
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where it would be really hard.
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It's just the way the, the way the
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MR, um, anatomically, and the patient
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has been positioned, but it would be
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hard to get above the pec minor here.
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To see these lymph nodes, so this
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is a nice example, it would be really
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difficult to see level 3 lymph nodes.
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Um, we do see, um, large, even though they're
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enormous, they're all level 1 lymph nodes, which
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is really surprising because this is her pec
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minor and her pec major on the right side.
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She has a very large again, heterogeneous,
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irregular enhancing lymph node with
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actually, there is a susceptibility
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artifact in it, and it's just they're huge.
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And there are a lot of them.
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And they're probably actually several
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lymph nodes that are matted as to whether
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we could distinguish for the surgeon.
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If there's,
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if there's 3 or less, or 4 to 9, or greater
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than 9, it's impossible in this patient.
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But as we come down, we're seeing
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that we're seeing a long string of
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matted, presumably matted lymph nodes,
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and then we're getting into this.
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Really, um, graphic example of
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rim enhancement, heterogeneous
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enhancement, and a really large tumor.
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Um, she only has interestingly
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level 1 lymphadenopathy.
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Uh, they're large and
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impressive, but it's only level 1 and
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then the other thing that we wanted
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to make sure that you knew about this.
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This case is this direct extension.
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So she has direct extension to the skin.
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She has direct extension
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into the pectoral muscle.
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So there's no question.
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Um, this is her pectoral muscle, uh, here and,
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um, in, in terms of the chest, you can see
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the mass actually dipping into it and with
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some concomitant enhancement of the pec.
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Um, and then one final thing on the axial
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images, you can tell that there is diffuse
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skin thickening and skin enhancement that is
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really nicely seen on the subtracted images.
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So altogether and rapidly enlarging
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again with erythematous breast as well.
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So you put all those together and she
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likely even has an inflammatory breast
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cancer component to her breast cancer.
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Um, which is a certain type of breast cancer.
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Let me show you in the sagittal plane as well.
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I'm going to show you the normal breast
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sagittal plane, and you can see how nicely
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maintained the fascial plane is between the
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parenchyma and she's small, or at least her
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breasts are not necessarily small relative
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to her body habits, but she's a small person
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and you, you can see quite nicely that, um,
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that even though she is extremely dense, and
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there is a lot of enhancing parenchyma, that
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the, um, that the pec is, um, uh, remains,
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um, pristine, uh, with its striated muscle.
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And even though the parenchyma is sitting on
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it, there's no enhancement of the pec.
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And so that's the normal side.
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And in contrast, um, the, um,
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abnormal side shows very graphically.
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Um, the, um, extension and involvement
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of the pectoral muscle and enhancement
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of the pectoral muscle as well.
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So this is pectoral invasion.
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This is not chest wall invasion.
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Remember, chest wall invasion
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requires involvement of the
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musculature of the chest wall,
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not the pectoral muscle. The pectoral muscle
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is considered part of the breast, part of
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the superficial chest structures, whereas
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the chest wall and specifically
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the intercostal muscles, the transversus
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muscle... we're going to see an example of
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that in just a moment. But that is this.
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And then you can see again, the similarity
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between the lymph node enhancement
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and enlargement of her axillary lymph
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nodes and her primary tumor.
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Let's go back and look at her internal mammary.
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Let's just practice this.
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And I think this is a lovely example.
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And then I always, as,
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you know, apologize about.
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Calling this, um, this patient a
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lovely or great example of anything,
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because, of course, it's awful.
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But, um, of the recruitment of the lateral
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internal mammary vessels, artery in
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particular, and the vein that tumor is
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commanding and demanding, um, blood supply.
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So, but this is what a vessel looks like.
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And remember, this looks very different than the
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internal mammary lymph nodes that we just saw.
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I mean, I, there, there was some method to how
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we, to the madness of how we organized week 5,
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and even how I've organized our office hours.
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But so I just want to, this
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is, um, a continuous vessel.
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You're just tracing it down.
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You're tracing the artery down,
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asymmetric in size, right versus
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left, but that's because this.
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This, um, triple negative breast cancer, um, is,
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um, has recruited, has recruited vascularity.
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And then I, I know I spoke earlier
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about not being, um, not being misled
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by, uh, by a vessel that was exiting
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and going, um, going into the breast.
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And this would be an example of
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one of those vessels where you can actually
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see the vessel going into the breast, internal
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mammary artery branch going into the breast.
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So, but her internal mammary,
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um, uh, parasternal.
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Parasternal sites are normal,
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so there's no lymphadenopathy.
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So I just wanted to illustrate that and you've
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got to go all the way up and all the way down.
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Remember we had that last case where
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I think probably some people just
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didn't see the inferior 1 because
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you just didn't go low enough.
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Truth be told.
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Um, so we're just continuing to scroll down.
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Okay.
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Any questions about any questions about that?
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Um, so let's see, let me just make sure I
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made all the teaching points I wanted to.
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So case 3, uh, was locoregional lymph nodes.
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In this case, it was axillary.
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They weren't subtle, but
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they're all level 1 axillary.
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Um, the pectoral, um, muscle,
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um, enhancement slash invasion.
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And the inflammatory breast cancer component.
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All of those things are, um, all of those
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things are, um, are stage three cancers,
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you know, once the patient has had, um,
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systemic staging and just negative, which
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hers was, um, then, uh, all of this backs
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back down to stage three cancer while the
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survival statistics are considerably lower.
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Uh, then stage 2 tumors, certainly, um, stage 3
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cancer, um, survivors exist all over the world.
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And, um, certainly we have a, a large
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cohort of them in, in my practice.
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