Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Finazzo, we're back for round
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3 00:00:02,190 --> 00:00:04,330 three of this 84-year-old gal.
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She's got all kinds of lesions, and we're here
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at the Delicatessen with, uh, Pastrami now, and
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we've got, uh, a sort of solid-looking lesion
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on T2, and I say that because it's gray, you
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know, intermediate to low signal intensity.
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At least for me, in my primitive mind,
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conjures up things like oncocytoma, uh,
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chromophobe, uh, renal cell carcinoma.
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Yeah, they can be darker than this, but at any
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rate, it looks kind of solid on initial inspection.
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And then we go over to the GRE in phase and
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out of phase, and it still is pretty gray.
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And then we go over to the T2 fat suppression, and
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it's still pretty gray, also on the coronal projection.
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Then we go through our liturgy of time
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activity enhancement, and the lesion doesn't
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look like it has much enhancement at all.
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Down here at the bottom, we've got some subtraction,
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and for all intents and purposes, it's cold.
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There's a little edge to it right there.
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That might be some compressed tissue.
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Or it might be a little bit of misregistration,
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but inside this lesion, absolutely nothing.
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Would you agree?
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Yes.
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So, what do we do with it?
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She's 84 years old.
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And again, I think that this is a leave-alone lesion.
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There's no aggressive features.
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It has no restricting diffusion,
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um, and it does not enhance.
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And I think this is another example of a different
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way a protonaceous or complex cyst can, uh, be seen.
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You know, we've got a high B value, um,
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diffusion-weighted image, and then an ABC map,
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and you've got this funny-looking streak right
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here, but it's very eccentrically positioned.
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So, it's probably a, a, a form of, of
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artifact, perhaps a susceptibility artifact.
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But when you go over to the subtraction image,
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there's absolutely no papillary projections whatsoever.
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Now, if you go back to the lesion that we looked
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at in the last vignette, there is a little bit
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of diffusion restriction that does correspond in
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its locus to an area of very delayed enhancement.
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So we said on that one, especially, it's kinda
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complex on, on the interior of it, I think watchful
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waiting, that this could be some type of weird
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cyst with inflammation, but it could also be
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a papillary projection from a papillary tumor.
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So we're not out of the woods yet with that lesion,
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and this patient's gonna be surveyed over time.
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I think I mentioned to you that when you have a cystic
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papillary tumor, they're more likely to have papillary
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projections, whereas when you have a cystic renal
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cell carcinoma, more septa than papillary projections.
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But we're stuck with this lesion.
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We'll survey it over time, maybe at 3, 6, 9, and 12.
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For a two-year time frame.
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All right.
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It's P and P out.
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