Interactive Transcript
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This is a patient in his late 80s, patient
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who presents with, who was found to have
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obstructive liver function tests in his
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lab values, and they got a non-contrast CT.
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They couldn't give intravenous
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contrast due to renal insufficiency.
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And so, scrolling through these sets of
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images, I've windowed them a little bit
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to sort of show you some of the findings.
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We can see in the liver that there
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are dilated bile ducts, the left
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hepatic duct, ducts are dilated.
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Some of the right hepatic ducts are dilated.
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You can see that posteriorly
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here, anteriorly here.
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Everything is quite dilated.
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And if you were just to follow it downwards,
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it looks dilated at its confluence.
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The common hepatic duct looks dilated as
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well and looks dilated up to about this
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portion here and beyond that, oh, it gets
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very difficult to see the bile duct.
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So presumably, somewhere between here
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and here, where you can kind of see the
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common bile duct again, there's some sort
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of abnormality that is causing, causing
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obstruction of these bile ducts, but
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very difficult to delineate on this exam.
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So the patient then got an MRI exam.
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This was also done without intravenous contrast.
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However, the abnormality
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uh, it's a little bit more apparent on this one.
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And so we start off with our T2-weighted images,
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and we can see that the bile ducts are dilated,
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very easy to see on the T2-weighted images.
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As we scroll downwards, the confluence is
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dilated, the common hepatic duct is dilated.
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Here we start to see some
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of the cystic duct as well.
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That looks like it's distended, some bile
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in the, uh, gallbladder that's layering.
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And right around here, we're going
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to start to see something, and the
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common bile duct here looks normal.
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So there is some sort of mass, this sort of T2
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signal mass, sort of relatively hypointense
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mass to intermediate signal mass that is
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resulting in this biliary ductal obstruction.
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Looking at it on the coronals, you
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can see right over here beautifully.
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dilated bile ducts and a very discrete mass
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that's emanating from the distal extrahepatic
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biliary tree, probably really at a confluence
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of the common hepatic and common bile ducts.
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And so this is another good look
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for a potential cholangiocarcinoma.
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Of course, you would need
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histology to confirm this.
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The reason I wanted to show this
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case is this is another example of
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this turned out to be a cholangiocarcinoma,
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and this is another example of a distal
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cholangiocarcinoma, but its appearance is a
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little bit different than the case that was
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shown a little bit earlier, in that it's not
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necessarily manifesting as just a region of
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thickening and enhancement involving
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the distal common bile duct, but there's certainly
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a more, uh, mass-like component and some of
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this looks almost polypoid in its appearance.
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And so you can also have that appearance
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with these cholangiocarcinomas.
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And so this was a nice example
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of what that could look like.
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