Interactive Transcript
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Our next case is in an adult.
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This is another didelphys uterus.
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So key findings here.
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On our T2 axial field of
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view, ovary, ovary, normal.
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And you can see, I'll stop right there.
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These are two very widely
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disparate horns, right?
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Here's the endometrium in this one.
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You can see beautiful T2 bright endometrium.
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This is your T2 dark junctional zone.
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This is your myometrium, and then a very
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light T2 dark serosal surface right here.
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So horn over here, horn over
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here, very widely disparate.
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There's a huge cleft right here.
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These are two different horns.
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You follow them all the way down
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and there are two separate cervices.
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You can see them again,
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sort of diverge right here.
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So this is your classic appearance
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of a didelphys uterus on an MRI.
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So little to absolutely no fusion.
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Again, it is always important to look for
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a hemivagina. And in this particular case,
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because we come down here, there's a
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vagina here, there's a vagina here,
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and there almost looks like there's
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an odd separation between these two.
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And this person did have hemivaginas here,
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so the separation, or lack of fusion, continued
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on through the vagina, right down here.
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Here's your coronal view of it.
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Sometimes your coronal might be the
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best view, sometimes it's your axial.
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But again, just so you can see here,
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two completely separate cervices,
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one over here, one over here, they come
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close to one another, but they never
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actually fuse to become one endometrium.
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And again, two widely placed horns.
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And in our case right here, let me
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window level that for you a bit.
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She has only one kidney.
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So again, unilateral agenesis in this
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particular case of the left kidney.
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Other things to look for.
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This was her preoperative.
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So the MRI I just showed you
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was actually postoperative.
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This is how she presented earlier.
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So ovary here, ovary here,
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again, your didelphys, right?
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In this case though,
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the endometrium looks a bit different.
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There's a fluid-fluid level
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within the endometrium, right?
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So this is going to be blood product.
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So definitely a didelphys, but now you have
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this fluid-filled structure right here.
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As you follow this down,
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it was in the left hemivagina.
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So her left hemivagina was obstructed,
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and so this was blood product.
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Use your T1s there to definitely be for sure
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that it's blood product, but you can see here
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we have multiple fluid-fluid levels right here.
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This is obstruction and blood
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product and that needs to be fixed.
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So if you do have a didelphys, you're still at
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risk of an early labor similar in some sense to
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the unicornuate because you have a uterus that
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is smaller than usual, will not necessarily
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expand to the normal size of a regular uterus.
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So you are at risk of premature birth
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and you're at risk for IUGR of the baby
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because of those growth restrictions.
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So those are things to keep in mind.
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Surgically, there's nothing they can do
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to change that, but you do need to look
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for that septation or hemivagina to fix
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that, especially if there's an obstruction.
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That can be fixed and should be fixed.
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