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Teratoma – Case

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Okay, so here is a case of a

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patient with bilateral teratomas.

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So again, for my female pelvis MR

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cases, I tend to start with the

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sagittal just to get a lay of the land.

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So I know the uterus is anteverted.

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I take a quick look at the

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junctional zone and the endometrium.

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You can see there are a few

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cervical nabothian cysts.

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Typically, we ask our patients to

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empty their bladder prior to the study,

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just so that there's no peristalsis

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from bladder filling or overfilling.

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Unless we're imaging the bladder or the urethra,

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those would really be the main situations

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where we would ask the bladder to remain full.

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But otherwise, I find that with a full

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bladder, it tends to displace the uterus

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sometimes, and then as the bladder gets

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overfull, it peristalsis and causes some

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degradation of, of diagnostic quality.

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Okay, so again, a quick overview, anterior,

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middle, and posterior compartments, and

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right away in the posterior compartment,

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you can see there's an abnormal structure

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there, and maybe another structure.

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Okay, so now we look for the

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ovaries, so that's the second step.

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So these are my Small field of view,

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T2 weighted images on the bottom

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left that I'm scrolling through now.

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So, Normally the ovary would be right

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around here and you can see that

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there's an enlarged structure here

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and a similar finding on the right side.

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So we're seeing a few little follicles,

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but then we're seeing these abnormal

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mass-like structures as well.

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So now the next question is: what are these?

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So we know that they have high T2 signal

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within them, and then some debris or layering

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material. This T2-weighted sequence

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has been acquired without fat saturation.

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So you can see the subcutaneous fat and

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the fat within the pelvis is quite bright.

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Now we're applying fat saturation, and

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we've acquired a T1-weighted sequence with

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fat saturation on the bottom right here.

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So now we can see that these

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areas that were bright without fat

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saturation have now suppressed.

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So there's clearly fat within

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this lesion, and there is some

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layering material that's sort of bright signal

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on T1 and intermediate signal on T2, which

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might represent some proteinaceous material

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or maybe some liquefied fat, potentially.

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And then in the right ovary, again, we're

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seeing fat saturation within that area that

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was high T2 signal without fat saturation.

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And you can see that this patient

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has some rounded or lobulated looking

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structures within one component and

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maybe another component as well.

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So we would want to know if those enhance

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to determine whether there are areas

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of potential malignant transformation.

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So the other feature that I talked

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about briefly was in the last slide,

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was that we have a free clue here.

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So if we look carefully on the T2

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images, we can see that there are some

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alternating lines of bright and dark signal.

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And that's what chemical shift looks like.

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So right away, even without looking

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at the fat-saturated sequences, we can

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see this onion skin pattern.

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And that tells us that there's

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chemical shift within this lesion.

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So it has to contain fat.

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So you can look really smart at

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your boards or, you know, at rounds.

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If you say, "Well, I don't need

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the fat-saturated sequences.

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I can just look at the T2

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and look for chemical shift."

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And then you can impress your colleagues

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or your faculty by knowing that little tidbit of information.

Report

Faculty

Zahra Kassam, MD, FRCPC

Associate Professor of Medical Imaging, Division Head of Body Imaging

Western University

Tags

Ovaries

Neoplastic

MRI

Gynecologic (GYN)

Body

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