Interactive Transcript
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So this patient is a somebody in his 60s and
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presents with the right upper quadrant pain, got
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a non contrast CT scan to start with, couldn't
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give intravenous contrast for some reason.
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And there's a lot of information that we
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can glean from this CT scan, even without
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intravenous contrast, if we just window
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things and just focus on the liver.
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Start to see that there's a very old defined
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mass in the inferior right hepatic lobe.
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Let me window this even more.
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I'm going to mag up on it, magnify on it.
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You can see.
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Right over here, there's
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the borders of this mass.
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It's relatively hypodensive
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compared to the liver parenchyma.
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And the other thing that you notice
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is that look what it's doing to
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the outer border of the liver.
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You were to take your finger
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and run it across here.
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It looks pretty smooth,
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pretty smooth, pretty smooth.
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And right over here.
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Your finger would go inwards, and it
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would go upwards again, and then pretty
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smooth and consistent all the way around.
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So, it's sort of tugging
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at the liver parenchyma.
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There seems to be some focal capsular retraction
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associated with whatever this abnormality is.
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The patient subsequently got an MRI.
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So we'll start off with this
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coronal T2 weighted sequence.
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It's not one of our conventional sequences.
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This was done at an outside institution,
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but nevertheless, it has T2 weighting.
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And so I think it will be useful just
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to kind of show you the appearance
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of this lesion on T2 weighted images.
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So we're going to scroll through it and you
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can see right over here, this is that lesion.
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Notice that it has this sort
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of intermediate T2 signal.
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It certainly doesn't look very hyper
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intense like normal fluid would look.
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It looks more hyper intense
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than the liver parenchyma.
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It sort of has this sort of intermediate signal
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that oftentimes when I see that signal, I'm
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concerned about an underlying malignancy.
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And if you notice very carefully, you can
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see that sort of capsule retracted right
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over there associated with this lesion.
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Let's look at it on the T1 pre
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contrast image and the post contrast
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image in the arterial phase.
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You can see the lesion right over here, it's
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hypo intense with respect to liver parenchyma.
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You can see that capsular
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retraction beautiful over here.
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And when we give contrast, we notice that
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the lesion enhances right over there.
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It's interesting to see what this lesion does
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on the remaining post contrast sequences.
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This is just the arterial phase where
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it has some enhancement, but what
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does it do on the portal venous phase?
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What does it do on the equilibrium phase?
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Let's have a look.
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So let's look at what this lesion does on
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the arterial portal venous and equilibrium.
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equilibrium phase images.
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Let's get down to the lesion itself.
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Here we have the arterial phase, portal
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venous phase, and equilibrium phase.
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And there's a little bit of motion, a
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little bit of artifact, but certainly as
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you go from the arterial phase to the portal
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venous phase, if we just focus perhaps on
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this posterior aspect of the lesion to the
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equilibrium phase, we notice that the lesion
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enhances most on the more delayed phase.
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That's it's brighter inside of it on this image.46 00:01:34,850 --> 00:01:36,660 It certainly doesn't look very hyper
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intense like normal fluid would look.
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It looks more hyper intense
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than the liver parenchyma.
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It sort of has this sort of intermediate signal
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that oftentimes when I see that signal, I'm
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concerned about an underlying malignancy.
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And if you notice very carefully, you can
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see that sort of capsule retracted right
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over there associated with this lesion.
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Let's look at it on the T1 pre
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contrast image and the post contrast
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image in the arterial phase.
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You can see the lesion right over here, it's
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hypo intense with respect to liver parenchyma.
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You can see that capsular
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retraction beautiful over here.
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And when we give contrast, we notice that
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the lesion enhances right over there.
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It's interesting to see what this lesion does
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on the remaining post contrast sequences.
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This is just the arterial phase where
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it has some enhancement, but what
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does it do on the portal venous phase?
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What does it do on the equilibrium phase?
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Let's have a look.
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So let's look at what this lesion does on
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the arterial portal venous and equilibrium.
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equilibrium phase images.
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Let's get down to the lesion itself.
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Here we have the arterial phase, portal
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venous phase, and equilibrium phase.
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And there's a little bit of motion, a
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little bit of artifact, but certainly as
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you go from the arterial phase to the portal
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venous phase, if we just focus perhaps on
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this posterior aspect of the lesion to the
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equilibrium phase, we notice that the lesion
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enhances most on the more delayed phase.
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That's it's brighter inside of it on this image.
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than it is on this image,
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than it is on this image.
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So putting it together we have this lesion in
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the liver causing capsular retraction that sort
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of progressively enhances and appears brightest
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on the inside on the more delayed phase images.
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This finding is highly concerning for a
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cholangiocarcinoma and specifically the
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least common type of cholangiocarcinoma.
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The most common is in the hilar.
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followed by these distal cholangiocarcinomas.
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At least common there's these intra hepatic
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or peripherally located cholangiocarcinomas.
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You know, the key imaging findings are
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that when, particularly when they're
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located out in the periphery, they cause
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capsular retraction because of that
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fibrotic reaction that they elicit.
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And also because of that fibrotic
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reaction, they tend to enhance
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more on the delayed phase images.
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And that's true for all
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these cholangiocarcinomas, no
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matter where they're located.
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Nevertheless, you know, the imaging
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appearance is suggestive of it,
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but we can't be pathognomonic.
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It's not one of these things where you
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say this is a cholangiocarcinoma and the
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referring providers can initiate treatment.
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They do need a tissue diagnosis,
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but it is important to let them know
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that this is most likely a diagnosis
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based on the imaging appearance.
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And when they get the histology, they can
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then confirm that indeed the histology
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matches what the imaging findings are seeing.
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So once again, this is an example of a
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peripheral or intrapathic cholangiocarcinoma.
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