Interactive Transcript
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Our next case is a 26-year-old
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who presented with abnormal uterine bleeding,
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and so started with an ultrasound.
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There are still images.
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You can see it's a little bit of free
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fluid near the rectum and the cul de sac.
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We're at the level of the cervix.
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This is a little bit of vaginal
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tissue here, external os here,
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cervix coming through here.
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So far so good.
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Continue through,
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everything looks normal so far.
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We have a nice sagittal uterus picture.
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Looks very much like the normal
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anatomies that we saw earlier on.
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It's a little bit thin at
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2.5 centimeters width though,
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but maybe within normal.
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As we keep going, now we're labeling this left.
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We get to the 3D imaging here
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where they're acquiring them.
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You can already see little snippets
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where we have two divergent endometriums.
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And now we're labeled right.
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So our technologist here is telling us that
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there are two separate endometriums right here.
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She's now coming up through the cervix where it
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looks like there's one endometrial canal in the
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lower uterine segment and then they diverge.
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Again, endometrium here, endometrium here,
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diverge, fairly widely
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unlike the last case that we saw.
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Pretty wide divergent right here.
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Let me get to the ovaries.
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So it's important to note here
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that we can't see a fundal contour.
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You can try on your cine clips and this
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is going to be our transverse cine clip
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here, starting at the level of the cervix
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and moving up one endometrial cavity.
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And they diverge,
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but you can't tell what the
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fundal contour looks like.
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Sagittal, you can make a good educated guess.
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There's going to be one horn or one endometrium.
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Your contour is right here.
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I'm going to leave my mouse right here.
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As we scroll through it, you can see it kind
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of goes down a little bit below my mouse
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before it comes back up to meet the mouse.
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This one actually goes a little bit higher.
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So it's hard to say, you know, are we
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just slightly off axis, or is there
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definitely a dip in that fundal contour?
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So this is when your 3Ds are going to
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become really, really, really important.
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So we'll skip through the rest of these images.
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3D here, not particularly gorgeous images.
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61 00:02:03,539 --> 00:02:04,589 It can be a little bit hard when
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you have two different uterine horns
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that may not be perfectly in plane.
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So you can see here we have endometrium here,
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endometrium here, and just like what we saw
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in our cineclips, they do fuse down here.
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There is a fusion.
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This is not a didelphys.
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We do not have two cervixes.
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We have one cervix.
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We do have two horns right here, and I would
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argue this is definitely dipping down here.
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You could measure, for example,
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like this, to see how widely disparate they are.
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That's 49 degrees.
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But I think you can also tell just visually,
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this is definitely a cleft right here.
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This is going to be an incomplete
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mullerian duct fusion at the fundus.
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They did fuse normally down here.
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And that cleft greater than one centimeter,
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that external contour, which we definitely have
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here, that gives us a diagnosis of bicornuate.
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It is important, as I said, if you have
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an obstructive vagina or vaginal septum.
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It's usually going to be a didelphys
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or a septate uterus, but 25%
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of bicornuates also have them.
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So it's important just to keep that in mind,
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although it's certainly a lot less common.
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You can see here too, our tech went through a
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little bit trying to get you the best possible
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image of that fundal contour, but you can see
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there's always that kind of little divot right
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there where it failed to fuse right there.
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So this is a bicornuate uterus.
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