Interactive Transcript
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So this patient is a 74-year-old gentleman
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who is post-liver transplant and has elevation
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in liver function tests, and an MRI was
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requested in order to evaluate these findings.
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Start off with T2-weighted images,
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which were performed with fat saturation.
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I'll stop on this slice over here
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and we can notice in the right
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hepatic ducts, the ducts are dilated.
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We can see over here, they are
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larger than what we would expect, not
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tremendously dilated, but nevertheless
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more than what we would expect to be normal.
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Let's keep on scrolling, and as you go
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more downwards, you can see, you know,
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larger ducts that are more dilated.
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And again, right-sided ductal dilatation.
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The remainder of the liver looks okay.
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It's really just the right hepatic lobe,
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and specifically almost the posterior
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aspect of it that's more dilated.
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Some ducts that start to join
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in over here look dilated.
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Some of the ducts here may be now dilated.
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And now we're starting to get to a potential
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filling defect inside of one of these
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ducts, this T2 hypointense structure.
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We're going to get to that in a bit.
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You can follow it over here as well.
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And as we go to the extrahepatic biliary tree,
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relatively normal caliber over here, all the
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way down to the ampulla and the duodenum.
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All right.
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So let's look at those findings one more time.
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Right-sided ducts that are dilated.
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Some filling defects inside the biliary
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tree as you go towards the porta hepatis
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and then beyond the porta hepatis, really
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beyond that anastomosis, which the bile
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ducts are the biliary anastomosis, the
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biliary tree is relatively normal in caliber.
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Let's have a look at the T1-weighted images.
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This is a T1 fat-saturated
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image in the axial plane.
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We're going to relook at those findings
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and specifically those filling defects.
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So you can see some of the
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bile ducts that are dilated.
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They're hypointense.
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As you go downwards, notice that those
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filling defects are T1 hyperintense.
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We can see them sort of conform
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to the biliary tree itself.
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It just sort of fills
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whatever space is there.
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And I'm going to sort of show
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this in a different plane.
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So in the reconstructed coronal plane,
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we can see that that region, which is
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T1 hyperintense, actually conforms to
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a very linear sort of filling defect
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that's within the bile ducts themselves.
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It almost looks, it's almost geographic in
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shape and very, very linear and almost tapered
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borders, uh, superiorly and inferiorly.
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So remember this patient is a
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patient who is post-transplant.
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Uh, the bile ducts are dilated in
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the intrahepatic ducts as it goes
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towards the extrahepatic biliary tree.
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There's a relative area where transitioning
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between dilated ducts and normal ducts.
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So probably there's a region of stricturing,
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particularly given the history of elevated LFTs.
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But what's also interesting to note is
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that there are some filling defects sort
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of in the intrahepatic ducts upstream
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from the region of the anastomosis.
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And again, that tells us that there's some
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stasis, but these filling defects have a
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relatively unique appearance in that area.
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You know, they are T2 hypointense,
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T1 hyperintense, but they're not
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nice and round or like a triangle like
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we see a lot of choledocholithiasis.
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Rather, their shape is much more linear,
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and they're contiguous, and they almost
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look like they're conforming to the shape
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of the bile ducts in which they're forming.
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If we look at the ERCP images, we
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can see the scope over here; we'll
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cannulate the common bile duct.
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And you can start to see that filling defect
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is a very linear filling defect that almost
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conforms to the shape of the bile ducts.
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And so the reason I wanted to show this
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case is that we've talked about different
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types of filling defects in the biliary
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tree, such as choledocholithiasis or stone.
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We've talked about biliary
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sludge that can occur as well.
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And we've talked about different types
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of stones, pigmented, which are T1 hyper
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intense, non-pigmented stones as well.
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This is an additional type of filling
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defect that is often seen in
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patients with biliary transplants.
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And we call these biliary casts.
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And what happens is that you have a solid
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cast of bilirubin that forms inside the
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biliary tree that can result in obstruction.
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And to differentiate it from biliary
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sludge, biliary casts are much more
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T2 hypointense or T1 hyperintense.
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And just looking at them, you know,
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sludge is just sort of thickened
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bile; it doesn't quite precipitate.
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Well, this is actually a solid
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precipitated form of bilirubin.
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When you take it out, it's sort of the
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solid thing that you're sort of taking
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out of the biliary tree itself.
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The key though here is that you often see these
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in transplanted patients, and when you see them,
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they're almost linear, curvilinear in shape.
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They can be T1 hyperintense and they conform to
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the shape of the bile duct, which makes it quite
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different from any of the other filling defects
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we've talked about in this master course.
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