Interactive Transcript
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So this patient is a 55-year-old male, history of
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pre transplant evaluation, trying to do a liver transplant.
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So they wanted to look at the liver to make sure
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that there are no abnormalities prior to doing so.
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We'll start off by looking at the T2, non-fat saturated
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image, as I do with most of the exams of the abdomen.
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And again, we're focused on the gallbladder,
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so there's a lot of stuff going on here,
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but let's just focus, uh, immediately on the gallbladder.
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We can see that there is, um, a somewhat
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familiar appearance by now of a gallstone.
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It's T2 hypointense, somewhat
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lobulated borders in this instance.
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And it's lying within, uh,
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an otherwise normal-appearing, uh, reasonably
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normal-appearing gallbladder over here.
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And we'll look at it on T2 fat-saturated image,
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19 00:00:49,255 --> 00:00:50,725 you can see again that it has
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that T2 hypointense appearance.
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Some of the borders in this instance look a little
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bit more sharp than they do on the first image.
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I wanted to show it to you on the
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T1 pre-contrast fat-saturated image
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because it has a sort of
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different appearance over here.
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So this really does look like a gallstone.
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However, the gallstones that we've been
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accustomed to seeing so far were both
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T2 hypointense and T1 hypointense.
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However, this one is T1 hyperintense.
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It's bright on these images.
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And so it has sort of a different
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imaging appearance that we can see.
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When we give contrast, let's see what it looks like.
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This is a T1-weighted, fat-saturated, post-contrast
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image in the portal venous phase I'm showing you.
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And it looks like it does enhance; however, because
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it contains T1 hyperintense content, you're not
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sure if this brightness on the post-contrast
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images is present because it truely is
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enhancing or whether this just reflects
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the T1 hyper intense content
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that it contained to begin with.
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And so for that, we need to look at subtraction images.
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When we look at subtraction images,
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there's a little bit of misregistration.
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You can see how the liver here,
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uh, is a little bit misregistered.
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There's this artifact associated with it, but when
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you look at this area in general, there's really
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no enhancement associated with this finding. So this
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is a non enhancing lesion within the gallbladder.
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And so, this imaging appearance is characteristics
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of the less common type of gallstone, which is the
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pigmented gallstones. And as we said gallstones
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can be either be qualified as cholesterol
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gallstones or pigmented gallstones in the U.S.
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60 00:02:37,260 --> 00:02:39,690 The vast majority of our cholesterol
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gallstones, which appear T2 and T1 hypointense.
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And then you have that subset of pigmented gallstones,
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which do appear T2 hypointense as seen over here.
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However, on the T1 weighted images,
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they have hyperintense content and they
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won't enhance when you give contrast.
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And so we generally qualify something as a pigmented
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gallstones if its internal content contains less
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than 50% cholesterol and it tends to have
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a higher percentage content of other constituents
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such as calcium bilirubinate, other glycoproteins.
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And one of the reasons that this is important
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is that it's thought that these are easier
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to remove via endoscopic lithotripsy,
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pigmented gallstones rather
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than the cholesterol gallstones.
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But I think for practical purposes, it's just
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important to know what gallstones could look like.
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The sort of variable appearance that when
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you look at images, you're not astounded or
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surprised by the appearance of gallstones.
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If they appear T1 hyperintense,
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they can certainly appear like that.
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And when they do, they're almost certainly
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going to be pigmented gallstones.
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