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Dropped Gallstones with Abscess (DWI)

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Next patient is a 45-year-old female who

0:03

presents with right upper quadrant pain.

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And so we got an, uh, an MRI to

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evaluate some of these findings.

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And in this instance, I'll start off by

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going on the T2-weighted fat-saturated image.

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And so, as with a lot of the patients

0:19

we've seen in this course, there's a

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lot of other abnormalities going on.

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We're going to try to ignore all that.

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And I want you to focus on the abnormality

0:28

seen in Morrison's pouch over here.

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Now this looks somewhat familiar to, um,

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some of the things we've seen already.

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We have, uh, looks like a collection over here.

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It's T2 hyperintense.

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Inside of it, we have these filling defects.

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This happens to be a round one.

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Many of them happen to be round.

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Some of them have more sharp and geographic

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borders that are associated with it.

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Um, and so this is another patient

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who's had a cholecystectomy.

0:54

And so we see this imaging appearance of

0:57

a collection in this location containing

1:00

what really does look like gallstones.

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We have to be worried about dropped

1:03

gallstones and the associated abscess.

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We can look on the post-contrast image.

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The rim of this abscess is enhancing quite avidly.

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The filling defects themselves are hypointense

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on the T1-weighted images, as we would expect for

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cholesterol gallstones, which are the more common

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type of gallstones we see in the United States.

1:25

And so, again, this is another case of

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dropped gallstones and associated abscess.

1:28

I want to show a bunch of these cases so you're

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used to sort of looking at this imaging appearance.

1:32

One of the reasons I also wanted to show this

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case is that we often don't do diffusion-weighted

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imaging in our institution, but I know, uh, that

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there are other places that do it more often.

1:43

And so if your institution does do them,

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I wanted to just show you what this would

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look like on diffusion-weighted imaging.

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So we have several B values here: B50, 400, and 800.

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You can see that there is hyperintense

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signal on the high B value images over here.

2:02

And, uh, on the ADC images, we can

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see that it is hypointense signal.

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So this is restricted diffusion within

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this abscess as we would expect to find.

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Uh, and in this instance, this abscess was a result

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of dropped gallstones in, uh, Morrison's pouch.

Report

Faculty

Mahan Mathur, MD

Associate Professor, Division of Body Imaging; Vice Chair of Education, Dept of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging

Yale School of Medicine

Tags

MRI

Infectious

Iatrogenic

Gastrointestinal (GI)

Gallbladder

Body

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