Interactive Transcript
0:01
Hey, Dr. P here.
0:02
61-year-old diabetic female who presents
0:06
with an ulcer on the plantar aspect of her
0:10
foot, and they want to know whether there's
0:13
osteomyelitis, which MR is just fabulous
0:16
at excluding, you know, no more gallium
0:19
scanning, no more bone scintigraphy, which
0:21
can take, you know, two, three, four hours.
0:25
MR does the job.
0:26
And you rarely need to give contrast.
0:29
They gave it here, Lord knows why,
0:32
but it didn't really add anything.
0:33
Here's the sagittal water-weighted image.
0:36
In the center is the fat-weighted image.
0:38
And on the far right is the
0:39
contrast-enhanced image.
0:41
Now, generally, when I look at the
0:43
Charcot feet, here's my approach.
0:46
First, one of the things you see in
0:47
Charcot foot that's not so much present here
0:50
is you have this very, almost painted on, ill-
0:53
defined, low signal intensity area of sclerosis.
0:58
Now, this is not a very sclerotic Charcot foot,
1:01
maybe it hasn't just reached that point yet.
1:04
The other thing you'll see is these
1:05
erosions are very distorted and weird, multi-
1:09
directional, but etched and sharply defined.
1:13
Even though they're fragmented,
1:14
they're still sharply defined.
1:15
In this particular case, what makes the
1:17
case easy is you look on this very, very,
1:21
very, elegantly acquired water-weighted
1:24
image, and you're looking for marrow edema.
1:26
There's a little bit of marrow edema back
1:28
here, but that's not enough marrow edema
1:31
to be seen in an infected segment of bone.
1:35
It's just not intense enough.
1:37
And then I go over to my T1-weighted images
1:40
and I actually don't see bone destruction.
1:43
I don't see the bone wiped away, the so-
1:46
called bone erasure sign of osteomyelitis.
1:50
Furthermore, when I look at my plantar
1:54
abscess and my plantar ulcer, I don't see
1:57
a sinus tract going into the Charcot area
2:01
of interest where osteomyelitis might live.
2:05
And that is a very helpful sign,
2:07
especially off the sagittal.
2:08
You know, you trace and follow this collection.
2:12
So, this is a case about foot masses.
2:15
It is a foot mass.
2:16
Here's the mass.
2:17
And when we enhance it, most of the
2:19
mass enhances, except for the center,
2:22
and that center is where all the pus
2:25
and neutrophils are going to live.
2:28
Let's look at the short axis projection,
2:31
and we get much of the same effect here.
2:34
On the water-weighted image, it's
2:35
hard to tell that we have a cavity.
2:37
On the T1-weighted image, it's hard to
2:39
tell that we have a cavity, but it's
2:40
certainly easy to tell that we have no
2:44
areas of infiltration, destruction, or wipe-
2:48
out of the marrow signal intensity here.
2:50
Now, sometimes, you'll have a little bit
2:52
of cortical signal, and then you'll get
2:54
a little bit of reactive edema over here.
2:58
But you won't see anything
2:59
on the T1-weighted image.
3:00
We call that cortical osteitis, or non-invasive,
3:04
non-penetrating cortical osteomyelitis.
3:08
That didn't occur in this particular case, but
3:11
with true osteo, medullary bone signal abnormal-
3:14
here, medullary bone signal abnormal here.
3:18
And then we injected this case again.
3:20
We didn't have to.
3:20
Here's the, here's all the pus and gore in
3:23
the center of this phlegmonous collection.
3:26
And finally, let's show you the three long axis
3:29
projections, which once again depict from a 10,
3:33
000-foot view, the degree of Charcot disease.
3:38
I think you could see there's also some widening
3:41
between the base of M1 and the base of M2.
3:45
So the Lisfranc ligament is toast.
3:48
It's completely gone.
3:50
There's collapse of the midfoot.
3:51
I'm rather surprised.
3:52
There isn't a bit more
3:53
sclerosis to show you, and then we've already
3:57
made our point that this patient has a nasty
4:00
collection in the middle here consisting
4:03
of abscess secondary to diabetes mellitus.
4:07
So the final diagnosis is Charcot foot
4:10
with a plantar abscess as our mass.
4:14
Let's move on, shall we?
4:15
Dr. P out.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.