Interactive Transcript
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So this next patient is a 40-year-old female with a history
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of a gastrointestinal stromal tumor involved in the stomach,
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and a staging CT scan was performed for further evaluation.
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So as we scroll through her CT imaging, we'll note that
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there is a rather large mass within the left hepatic lobe.
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We can see it over here.
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The patient is status post cholecystectomy,
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and we can scroll up and down through
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this indeterminate imaging features.
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So, an MRI was, uh, requested to further evaluate this.
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So, we'll start our evaluation of, uh, this
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patient's MRI looking at the T2-weighted sequence.
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And on the T2-weighted sequence performed
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without fat saturation, we can see a rather
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large mass within the left hepatic lobe.
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And if we were to look at its internal T2 contents
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within it, it looks different from some of the other
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stuff we've seen so far in that it's not particularly
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bright, certainly not as bright as the CSF over here.
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And if anything, it sort of looks similar
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to the adjacent liver parenchyma over here.
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So, I would say this is iso intense or
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minimally hyperintense with respect to the
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liver parenchyma on the T2-weighted images.
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Internally, we note that there are clefts
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within it over here and over here and over here.
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Perhaps some in this location that
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are slightly more T2 hyperintense.
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We'll get back to what those represent in a little bit.
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On the T2-weighted sequence performed with fat saturation,
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we can again, uh, look at the signal within this lesion.
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Again, we use these turbospineco fat sat sequences
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to really determine the T2 content of these lesions.
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And again, looks quite similar to the adjacent liver
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parenchyma, maybe iso to slightly hyperintense on the
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T2-weighted images with respect to the liver parenchyma.
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And it certainly has these clefts within
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it that are much more T2 hyperintense.
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The next set of sequences to look at are
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the T1 in and out of phase, and this is what
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the lesion looks like on those sequences.
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hypointense with respect to liver parenchyma, right?
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So it looks somewhat similar, but not quite the same.
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And similar in the in-phase image, it looks iso to
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slightly hypointense with respect to the liver parenchyma.
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There are no areas of diminished signal on the out
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of phase images to suggest fat within this lesion.
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And there's no increased susceptibility
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artifact on the in-phase images.
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At the periphery of this lesion, there is some
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increased susceptibility artifact over here and
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that just comes from cholecystectomy clips in
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this patient who had a prior gallbladder surgery.
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We'll then proceed to our T1 FATSAT precontrast image.
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And on this image, we can also see that the
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lesion overall has signal intensity that is
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somewhat similar to the liver parenchyma.
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But, if you look at it very critically, we can
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see that it's probably, if anything, a little
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bit T1 hypointense with respect to normal liver
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parenchyma and normal liver parenchyma over here.
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What does it do when we give intravenous contrast?
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So we move on to our post-contrast imaging sequences.
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We have the arterial, portal venous, and equilibrium phase
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images done over here, and I'll just settle in on a
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representative portion of this lesion right over here.
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In the arterial phase image, we note that the lesion
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itself has pretty homogeneous arterial hyperenhancement.
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On the portal venous phase image, the lesion
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is somewhat iso intense to slightly hyper
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intense with respect to the liver parenchyma.
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So if we were to look at it, you can argue that
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some portions look very similar to the liver
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parenchyma or iso intense, and some portions remain
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slightly brighter than the liver parenchyma.
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And finally, on the equilibrium phase images, I
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would argue that it looks very, very similar to the
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liver parenchyma, almost completely iso intense.
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Now, there are certain clefts within this lesion,
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right over there, that do not enhance on the arterial
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phase, and these, remember, were T2 hyperintense.
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They don't enhance on the arterial phase, but as you go
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from the arterial to the portal venous to the equilibrium
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phase images, we can see that that same area now enhances.
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And so we have a lesion that, for all
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practical purposes, looks very similar to the
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liver parenchyma on many of the sequences.
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Except for the arterial phase where it's definitively
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arterial hyperenhancing, and it has a little cleft of
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T2 signal that fills in on our equilibrium phase images.
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So if this is all we had, we would suggest that
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this most likely reflects focal nodular hyperplasia.
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Now when we evaluate patient focal nodular
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hyperplasia, or if that's the clinical question,
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we often do one final phase after giving an
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agent which has partial hepatobiliary excretion.
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We brought this patient back and did that final phase.
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I'll show you what the lesion looks like on those images.
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And so here are the final set of, uh, post
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contrast images performed at 20 minutes after
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giving, uh, intravenous, uh, contrast agent called
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Eovist that has partial hepatobiliary excretion.
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So this is with Eovist and we do these,
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as I said, at 20 minutes post-contrast.
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See the lesion here and it is relatively hyperintense.
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Some portions may be iso intense but predominantly
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hyperintense with respect to the liver parenchyma.
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And so the combination of these findings on the
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T2-weighted images, the post-contrast imaging, the
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EOVIS findings, makes this lesion characteristic of
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focal, nodular hyperplasia, now this is the second
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most common benign liver tumor after hemangioma.
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It occurs much more commonly in females than males,
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and it occurs in females typically of childbearing age.
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It's often incidental, seen in up to 90 percent
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of cases, it's just an incidental finding.
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And the thought previously with FNHs is that they were not
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responsive to estrogen at all, but the current thinking is
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that there may be some response to estrogen, such that if
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patients are, uh, going to become pregnant or are pregnant
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or an oral contraceptive pills, there is the risk of a
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small amount of growth associated with these lesions.
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associated with these despite, um, that potential
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for growth, um, with high estrogen states.
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On pathology, this manifests as a, uh, mass with a
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central scar with radiating septations coming from it.
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So it often looks like a central scar.
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Radiating septations, um, and that central scar
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is that portion that was T2 hyperintense and
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that enhanced late on the equilibrium phase.
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And so oftentimes when I look at a lesion and it sort
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of looks like an orange to me, you cut open an orange
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and cross section, if it looks like that, I'm going to
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think that this could reflect focal nodular hyperplasia.
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