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Case Review: When the Diffusion Imaging Fails

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0:03

Here's a 73-year-old man.

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He's got an elevated PSA three weeks

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prior to this examination of 8.1,

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and his last biopsy performed in the 90s.

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I didn't even know they did biopsies in the 90s.

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I can't even remember what I was doing in the 90s.

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He's had no other surgery, but he

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does have a strong family history.

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So let's take a look at this gentleman.

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Who has bilateral hip replacements.

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Now that's a problem.

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Because now we've got susceptibility

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effect and aspect ratio distortion

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that precludes the acquisition of a

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successful diffusion image and ADC map.

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So, what's a mother to do?

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We're gonna rely on the morphology and the

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DCE, Dynamic Contrast Enhanced MRI, which

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is useful in 10 percent or so of cases.

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Thank you.

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As a second line of defense, as a supplement, in

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a case where some of the other primary sequences

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are not available for various reasons, in this

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case, because of bilateral hip replacement.

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So let's scroll, we'll scroll down

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towards the apex, and we see some

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puffy, gray, nodular signal in the PZ.

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In fact, it's in the PZA.

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It's mostly apical.

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And it's on several slices.

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It does not involve the urethra,

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which is right next to it.

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But it is pushing out on the capsule,

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and has quite a bit of capsular abutment.

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Look at it on the coronal projection.

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It's also disturbing.

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Here we are down low.

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This is all peripheral zone right here.

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This is TZ, this is PZ, and within the

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PZ, our mass is bulging the lateral aspect

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of the capsule, and it's got some height.

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In fact, I'm gonna trace over it

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just so you can see it very nicely.

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And we do a lot of tracing when we are mapping

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out these lesions for our surgeons.

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So now, we have to go to our DCE MRI

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to see if it's a vascular lesion.

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We don't have to.

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But it would be helpful if it was vascular.

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And we would rely a little more heavily on

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the DCE MRI than we otherwise normally would.

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And sure enough, there it is.

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Maybe my cursor's a little bit off, but

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I think you can see this lesion here

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correlates to that lesion on the axial

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T2 2D fast spin echo correlates to

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this lesion in the coronal projection.

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Just for interest, and for giggles.

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We'll confirm that the neurovascular

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bundle, these little spots surrounded

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by fat, are not involved by our lesion.

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So we'll go high, then we'll go low to

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where the lesion is, to make sure that

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we do have a fatty plane, and we do.

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So we might have microcapsular invasion.

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We probably do not have

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neurovascular bundle invasion.

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We've relied on the DCE MRI as a supplement.

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Because our diffusion image has failed as a result

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of bilateral hip replacement and our T2 fast spin

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echo shows a morphologically highly worrisome

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area of nodularity, mass, and mass effect.

Report

Editorial Note

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

John F. Feller, MD

Chief Medical Officer, HALO Diagnostics. Medical Director & Founder, Desert Medical Imaging. Chief of Radiology, American Medical Center, Shanghai, China.

HALO Diagnostics

Tags

Prostate/seminal vesicles

Neoplastic

MRI

Genitourinary (GU)

Body

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