Interactive Transcript
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This case is a 60-year-old gentleman who presented
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with right flank pain, got a non-contrast CT.
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That showed an indeterminate, uh, mass in the liver,
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and an MRI was suggested for further evaluation.
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So as we begin systematically approaching this, uh, liver
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mass, we'll start off with our T2-weighted sequences.
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And we can already see a very, very large mass
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occupying the majority of the right hepatic lobe
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and portions of the left hepatic lobe on our T2
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weighted sequence performed without fat saturation.
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These findings are re-demonstrated on the T2
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weighted imaging performed with fat saturation,
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and it's quite hyperintense on these images.
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The signal, uh, portions of it, I would
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say, at least approximate the signal at CSF.
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And unlike the prior case, um, I would say that the
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T2 signal within this is relatively homogeneous.
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If you were to scroll up and down through
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this, uh, lesion, you don't see any of those,
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um, clefts of slightly brighter T2 signal.
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So I'm just scrolling up and down here just
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to kind of showcase the extent of this lesion.
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It's quite exophytic, and again, you're not seeing
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any of those clefts of bright T2 signal within this.
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Next set of images we need to look
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at are T1 in and out of phase images.
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On the in and out of phase images, we once again can
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see this large mass occupying majority of the right
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hepatic lobe, extending into the left hepatic lobe.
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On both the out of phase imaging sequence here and the
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in-phase imaging sequence, we can see that this lesion
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is pretty homogeneous and is T1 hypointense on both.
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There are no areas of, uh, decreased signal
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on the out of phase imaging sequence.
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It's just fat and no areas of, uh,
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signal loss in the in-phase images.
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Suggest, uh, content that can
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cause, um, susceptibility artifact.
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Next up is our T1 fat-saturated pre-contrast
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image, again showcasing this large mass.
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We can again see this mass, really, really big, it's, uh,
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pretty homogeneous and overall has T1 content that is
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hypointense, no areas of hyperintense T1 content within this.
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Final set of images to look at are the post-contrast images
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that will help us determine what this is going to be.
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So we can see this on the arterial phase images.
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This lesion has areas of peripheral contrast enhancement.
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On the portal venous phase, those areas start
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to fill in a little bit more centrally, and
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even more so on the equilibrium phase images.
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So this again means imaging features of a hemangioma,
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and it's an example of a giant hemangioma because of
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its large size, certainly way more than 5 centimeters.
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And the reason I wanted to show this case
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is because This particular one does not
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have areas of internal cystic degeneration.
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That's where one of the prior cases of giant
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hemangiomas had that, this doesn't have it.
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They don't all have to have it, but by and large, uh,
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hemangiomas follow this sort of enhancement pattern.
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While hemangiomas, uh, are generally benign, and
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this lesion as well will be benign, because of the
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large size, you may get some abdominal pain and
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discomfort due to mass effect and, uh, potentially,
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uh, coagulopathy due to Kasabach-Merritt syndrome.
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