Interactive Transcript
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This is a nine-month-old boy with
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refusal to bear weight and fevers.
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So this is a plain radiograph, and we
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noticed immediately that as we follow
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the cortical line from here to here,
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you sort of lose it here, don't you?
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It sort of is blurred out.
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Look at the cortical line here on your fibula.
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Even over here, you can still see a nice
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line, a nice line on the contralateral side over
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here, but here it's sort of just blurred out.
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And I can't really see very much there.
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I can't tell where the bone
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ends and the soft tissue begins.
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Let's see if that looks any
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differently on the oblique view.
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Yes.
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Let me zoom up a little on that.
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It does.
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I can't see it, but again, it looks just a
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little bit mottled in this area over here
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and maybe a little bit in the area over here.
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And on the lateral view,
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can we see anything funny?
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So the lateral view actually doesn't look
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that bad, but what we do see is a lot
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of soft tissue swelling here anteriorly.
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So it really bothers me that we see something
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like this on the frontal projection.
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And this makes me think, especially with the
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history of refusal to bear weight with fevers,
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that we may be looking at a case of infection.
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This is when we decided to get an MRI.
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And so let me show you some MR images.
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This is a sagittal, fat-suppressed,
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fluid-sensitive sequence.
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A lot of marrow abnormality in the
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diaphysis, extending to the metaphysis.
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Involving the physis, you see, you’ve lost that
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trilaminar appearance, right
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of your physis, and then extension
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of that high signal into the epiphysis.
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This is the ossified portion of the epiphysis.
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But look, again, the trilaminar
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appearance here has been violated and
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there is extension across the epiphysis,
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across the physis, into the epiphysis.
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What does that look like
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on post-contrast images?
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So let’s bring up two at a time.
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Here we’re going to have a pre-contrast,
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and here we’re going to bring up a
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post-contrast, just for comparison.
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Again, remember, any time you get post-
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contrast images, you have to compare
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it with a like pre-contrast image.
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Looking at the area of abnormality, we see that
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there is heterogeneous enhancement, not only
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in the marrow, but also some in the periosteum.
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You also have abnormal signal extending across
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the physis, extending into the epiphysis.
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Again, disruption of that
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metaphyseal enhancement.
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You can see the disruption here
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in the pre-contrast images also.
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So there’s something wrong.
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And this brings up a good point.
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Anytime you think that there may be an infection
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involved, or a very hypercellular process, then
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it helps to get diffusion-weighted imaging.
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It doesn’t look very nice, but
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you’re not looking for anatomy.
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You’re looking for areas
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of discrete signal dropout.
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And this is where I want to show
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you diffusion-weighted imaging.
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So here’s a diffusion-weighted image.
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And we’re looking for areas of
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blackness in the areas of abnormality
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we detected on the other sequences.
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So in this location over here.
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Over here, let me bring up the sagittal
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image to get a like-to-like comparison.
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I’m bringing up the sagittal here, zooming in.
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Notice, there’s an area of decreased
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enhancement crossing the physis involving
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both the metaphysis and the epiphysis.
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And that area corresponds
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to this blackness over here.
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So that tells me there may be a
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developing abscess happening in this location.
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That’s where the diffusion imaging
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adds value, where simple post-contrast imaging
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or STIR imaging may not.
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So, in the next vignette, I’m
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going to show you why this happens.
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Why an infection in the metaphysis
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has a propensity in this age
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group to go into the epiphysis.
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