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Benign Findings

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So we're going to move on to

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some benign findings, and these

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include intramammary lymph nodes.

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Um, so those are circumscribed,

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homogeneously enhancing masses.

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They're usually reniform with a fatty

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hilum, and generally less than one centimeter

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in size, although they can be larger.

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And we often see them in the

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upper outer quadrant, but they

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can be anywhere within the breast.

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And frequently we'll see them going

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along the lateral posterior breast.

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But they can be anywhere.

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And here's an example, T1-weighted

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non-fat-saturated image on the left and

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contrast-enhanced image on the right.

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And you can see this little mass here; it has

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a little bit of a fatty notch, little fatty

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hilum, and that was an intramammary lymph node.

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We can see a lot of non-enhancing

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findings on MRI, and those are important.

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To note as well,

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and it frequently will notice signal

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void or susceptibility artifact from

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foreign bodies and clips, especially

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things that are made out of metal.

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They'll cause a signal void, ductal pre-

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contrast high signal on T1-weighted images.

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We talked about that, that that

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represents proteinaceous fluid, whether

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or not, you know, it can be blood.

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It can just be protein-containing

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fluid, but it's high signal on T1.

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Cysts, postoperative fluid collections,

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which can be hematomas or seromas.

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And we can also see those after

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needle biopsies, post-therapy skin

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thickening, and trabecular thickening.

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So usually related to radiation therapy.

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Non-enhancing masses and architectural

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distortion, especially post-surgical.

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So here's an example of a biopsy clip.

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The type of clip we use after a percutaneous

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core biopsy, we'll place a clip, and although

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the clip itself is very small, it actually makes

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a fairly large signal void or signal dropout.

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And that lets us know where the clip is.

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So we do look for these and look to

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correlate them with prior biopsies.

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This is a patient who's had a lumpectomy

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here on the left side, and you can see

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these oval signal voids, and these were all

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from surgical clips at the lumpectomy site.

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This is a patient with a large known

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fibroadenoma in the left breast.

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Here's her mammogram,

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showing her heterogeneously dense tissue

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and a very large calcification here.

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And then this is the corresponding

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MRI showing the mass with several

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irregular signal voids within it.

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And this is from the course

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calcifications in the mass.

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This is an infusion port in the

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upper inner breast or chest area.

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And this one actually looks like an

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infusion port, but sometimes all you

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get is this, a big signal dropout.

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So it depends on the amount of metal in

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the infusion port, but the more metal,

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the larger the susceptibility artifact.

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So that one is from an infusion port as well.

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So it can look like this.

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Or it can look like this,

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or someplace in the middle.

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And then we talked about the high signal

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in ducts representing proteinaceous fluid.

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And here's an example, both in the axial

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and sagittal plane; you can see those

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ducts going up to the nipple and branching.

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This is an example of a large cyst.

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So that fluid-filled cyst on STIR images, and

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then on post-contrast images, the background

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tissue enhances, but the cyst does not.

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And cysts, as I mentioned before, can have

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a thin rim of enhancement around them,

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and that can still be considered benign.

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Often they don't have any enhancement

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either within the cyst or at the edge.

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This is a postoperative seroma in a

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patient who had a lumpectomy for breast

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cancer, and then had positive margins.

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And this MRI was performed to try and

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assess whether there was a particular

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margin that needed to be further excised.

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And in this case, you can see a fluid

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collection centrally, and then a thin rim of

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enhancement all the way around the seroma.

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So the MRI did not show us an area that

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specifically needed to be excised.

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This is a patient who's had a lumpectomy on the

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left side, and she's also had radiation therapy.

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So you can see on T1-weighted

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images, her skin is diffusely thick.

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So that dark gray line all

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the way around is her skin.

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And it is thickened on STIR images

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here on the right side of your screen.

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You can see that that skin is bright.

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So it is edematous; edematous thick

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skin after radiation therapy, and we also

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noticed that the sort of markings inside

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the patient's breast, the breast tissue,

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each little area is a little thicker.

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And some of those areas are edematous as

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well, so you often see that combination

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on imaging after radiation therapy.

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This is a patient who's had a lumpectomy.

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Thank you. Here on the, in the left

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anterior breast, you can see this

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distortion and scarring here on the T1

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weighted images without fat saturation.

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And I love this sequence for

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looking at pure anatomy, scarring

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areas of postoperative change.

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You see the susceptibility artifacts

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really well on the T1 non-fat set.

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Then we go to a post-contrast

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study at the same slice demonstrating no

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significant enhancement at the lumpectomy site.

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And that's pretty normal for patients who

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have had a remote history of lumpectomy.

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It's also normal to see a little bit of

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enhancement at that lumpectomy site, usually

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in the first few years after surgery.

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This is a patient with a mass

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in the right lateral breast.

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This is pre-contrast on the left

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and post-contrast on the right.

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And you can tell the difference because the

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heart here is dark or medium signal intensity on

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the pre and then it becomes bright on the post.

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We also see on the post-contrast image,

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the internal artery, mammary, and vein

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and vessels in the breast are bright.

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So no contrast enhancement at all in that mass.

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The breast also contains fat-containing lesions,

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and that can be helpful in interpretation.

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And we often see areas of fat necrosis.

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We can see hematomas, postoperative

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seromas, or hematomas that contain

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fat or liquefied fat, and lymph nodes.

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So we'll look at a few of these.

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This is a patient who had a breast

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reduction and was also at high

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risk, so she had a high-risk exam.

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You can see this oval-shaped

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area in her anterior left breast

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that has intrinsic fat signal.

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And this is a large area of

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fat necrosis after reduction.

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With contrast, we can see that there's

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a signal dropout from fat centrally.

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There is a little bit of

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enhancement around the rim.

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Fat necrosis can be very tricky because it is

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common in postoperative situations and post-

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traumatic situations, and it can demonstrate

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enhancement either a little bit or a lot,

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and it can be the reason for a biopsy.

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This is a patient who had trauma to the

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right breast and developed a hematoma at

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the site of trauma. This is a fat-fluid

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layer, with fat posteriorly and fluid

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anteriorly at the site of the trauma.

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And you may be wondering why the

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fat is at the bottom instead of at

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the top, because fat should float.

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And in fact it does. You have to recall that

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the patient was scanned in the prone position.

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So this is actually higher than this

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when the patient is being scanned,

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and we just flip it for presentation.

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This is an example of lymph nodes in

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the axilla shown with the yellow arrows.

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You can see that sort of C-shaped or reniform

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shaped mass with fat centrally, and these

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are normal little lymph nodes in the axilla.

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This is the pectoralis minor muscle.

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These are lateral to the pec minor.

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That makes them level one lymph nodes.

Report

Description

Faculty

Lisa Ann Mullen, MD

Assistant Professor; Breast Imaging Fellowship Director

Johns Hopkins Medicine

Tags

Women's Health

Mammography

MRI

Breast

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