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On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
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Noon Conference (Free)
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Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
1 topic, 5 min.
2 topics, 13 min.
35 topics, 2 hr. 11 min.
Morphologic Cirrhosis
5 m.Non-Malignant Nodules in the Cirrhotic Liver
2 m.Dysplastic Nodules
4 m.Portal Hypertension – 2 Patient Case Review
4 m.Pseudocirrhosis
3 m.LI-RADS – Summary
12 m.LI-RADS 1 or 2
3 m.LI-RADS 3
3 m.LI-RADS 3 (THID)
3 m.LI-RADS 4
3 m.LI-RADS 3 Upgraded to LI-RADS 4
4 m.LI-RADS 5
3 m.LI-RADS 5 Change in Lesion Overtime
4 m.LI-RADS 5 – Non-peripheral Washout (NPWO)
3 m.LI-RADS 4 – Psuedo Capsule
4 m.LI-RADS 3 – No Ancillary Imaging Findings
3 m.LI-RADS 5 – Size, Psuedo Capsule, & NPWO
3 m.LI-RADS 5 – 22mm with NPWO
3 m.LI-RADS 4 – Greater than 20mm, Lacking Ancillary Features
4 m.LI-RADS 5 – All-qualifiers, HCC
4 m.LI-RADS – Tumor in Vein (TIV)
6 m.LI-RADS – TIV Infiltrative Tumor
4 m.LI-RADS M – Metastatic Urothelial Cancer
5 m.Fibrolamellar Hepatocellular Carcinoma (FHCC)
6 m.Treatment Options
9 m.Successfully Treated LI-RADS 5
4 m.Successfully treated LI-RADS 5, with Recurrence
4 m.2 Lesions Treated with Transarterial Embolization
4 m.Partially Successful TASE
3 m.Recurrence in a Patient Treated with Radioembolization (Y-90)
4 m.2 Patients with Cholangiocarcinoma
8 m.Hypervascular Mets
4 m.Hypovascular Metastasis from Breast Cancer
4 m.Mucinous Liver Metastasis
4 m.Hypovascular Metastasis Post-op
4 m.0:00
The following vignette will showcase a patient
0:04
who has cirrhosis, with several nodules
0:07
in the liver, um, and it'll, we'll use it
0:10
as an opportunity to talk a little bit more
0:12
about some of the non-malignant nodules that
0:13
we can see in patients who have cirrhosis.
0:16
So here's our patient,
0:17
a 7-year-old male who's being screened
0:18
for hepatocellular carcinoma.
0:20
Over here we have a T2-weighted sequence.
0:23
Here we have a T1-weighted
0:24
sequence with fat saturation.
0:26
And we're going to focus on this nodule here.
0:30
The lateral left hepatic lobe.
0:32
Now, as has been mentioned previously,
0:34
with cirrhosis, there's chronic
0:36
inflammation, the liver parenchyma gets
0:38
destroyed, and then the liver tries to
0:39
regenerate some of that lost parenchyma.
0:42
And it does this, yielding
0:43
these regenerative nodules.
0:45
And they're composed generally
0:46
of normal liver cells.
0:48
But in addition to these regenerative
0:49
nodules, you can also develop
0:52
something called dysplastic nodules.
0:55
Now, dysplastic nodules will harbor
0:58
histologically abnormal cells.
1:00
They can have a variety of imaging
1:02
appearances, but in general, on the
1:03
T2-weighted imaging, they're going to
1:05
be lower in signal or hypointense.
1:08
On the T1-weighted imaging, they're going to
1:10
be hyperintense, as can be seen over here.
1:13
And when we give contrast, again, as can be seen
1:15
on this T1-weighted image with fat saturation,
1:18
post-contrast arterial phase, this is in the
1:21
portal venous phase, this lesion over here,
1:24
Generally, it demonstrates enhancement that is
1:27
similar to the liver or less than the liver.
1:32
There won't be any arterial hyperenhancement
1:37
associated with these dysplastic nodules.
1:39
Now it is thought that these dysplastic nodules
1:42
undergo various degrees of differentiation.
1:45
As a result, their imaging appearance can
1:48
change, so they can go from low-grade dysplastic
1:51
nodules to high-grade dysplastic nodules.
1:53
And in the following vignette, we're
1:55
going to showcase how some of these
1:57
changes look like on MR imaging.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
The following vignette will showcase a patient
0:04
who has cirrhosis, with several nodules
0:07
in the liver, um, and it'll, we'll use it
0:10
as an opportunity to talk a little bit more
0:12
about some of the non-malignant nodules that
0:13
we can see in patients who have cirrhosis.
0:16
So here's our patient,
0:17
a 7-year-old male who's being screened
0:18
for hepatocellular carcinoma.
0:20
Over here we have a T2-weighted sequence.
0:23
Here we have a T1-weighted
0:24
sequence with fat saturation.
0:26
And we're going to focus on this nodule here.
0:30
The lateral left hepatic lobe.
0:32
Now, as has been mentioned previously,
0:34
with cirrhosis, there's chronic
0:36
inflammation, the liver parenchyma gets
0:38
destroyed, and then the liver tries to
0:39
regenerate some of that lost parenchyma.
0:42
And it does this, yielding
0:43
these regenerative nodules.
0:45
And they're composed generally
0:46
of normal liver cells.
0:48
But in addition to these regenerative
0:49
nodules, you can also develop
0:52
something called dysplastic nodules.
0:55
Now, dysplastic nodules will harbor
0:58
histologically abnormal cells.
1:00
They can have a variety of imaging
1:02
appearances, but in general, on the
1:03
T2-weighted imaging, they're going to
1:05
be lower in signal or hypointense.
1:08
On the T1-weighted imaging, they're going to
1:10
be hyperintense, as can be seen over here.
1:13
And when we give contrast, again, as can be seen
1:15
on this T1-weighted image with fat saturation,
1:18
post-contrast arterial phase, this is in the
1:21
portal venous phase, this lesion over here,
1:24
Generally, it demonstrates enhancement that is
1:27
similar to the liver or less than the liver.
1:32
There won't be any arterial hyperenhancement
1:37
associated with these dysplastic nodules.
1:39
Now it is thought that these dysplastic nodules
1:42
undergo various degrees of differentiation.
1:45
As a result, their imaging appearance can
1:48
change, so they can go from low-grade dysplastic
1:51
nodules to high-grade dysplastic nodules.
1:53
And in the following vignette, we're
1:55
going to showcase how some of these
1:57
changes look like on MR imaging.
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
Non-infectious Inflammatory
Neoplastic
MRI
Liver
Gastrointestinal (GI)
Body
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