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Protocol – 31 yo woman – Family History

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Okay, our next case for protocol and anatomy

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is a 31-year-old woman who is seen for high

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risk screening, and she has a family history of

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breast cancer and four relatives at young ages.

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So, appropriately being seen

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for high-risk screening. Mr.

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We'll go to our case.

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So this is our, our case.

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I won't go through the localizer here, but this

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is the T1-weighted, non-fat saturated series,

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and I just wanted to show you this in a patient

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who has a larger breast size, kind of a larger

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sized patient with fattier breast tissue.

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So just going from the top, you

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can see that the patient has a lot

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of axillary tissue on both sides.

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Pectoralis minor and major muscles are

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well seen and are lower signal intensity.

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There's a lot of fatty tissue here.

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So that's high signal intensity.

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Kind of going through that, but no, so a bigger

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patient, we can still fit the patient in, we

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can still get the nipples pointing downward.

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And of course, you know, by convention,

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we image prone, but we display the

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images as if the patient is.

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Lying on her back, but keep in mind

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that the patient is always prone.

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And going through that STIR sequence,

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this is a sort of a quieter

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breast than the last one we looked at.

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There are some lymph nodes in the

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axilla, and then, you know, not

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too much going on in the breast.

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This is our pre-contrast sequence. Sometimes,

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with very fatty breast tissue, it can

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be hard to do fat saturation, especially

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at the top and bottom of the exam.

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You can see some areas where our fat saturation

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is a little bit inhomogeneous, but in the breast

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itself, we've actually done a pretty good job.

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You can see most of that fat is well

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saturated, even down to the last image.

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And then after contrast, we get some

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enhancement of our blood vessels.

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You can see internal mammary artery

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and vein are enhancing, and liver.

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This patient doesn't have very much

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enhancement in her breast tissue.

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Then there's to show you her

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And you can see lots of blood vessels

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here on the maximum intensity projection

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image, a little bit of tissue enhancement,

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really nothing significant here.

Report

Description

Faculty

Lisa Ann Mullen, MD

Assistant Professor; Breast Imaging Fellowship Director

Johns Hopkins Medicine

Tags

Women's Health

MRI

Breast

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